I remember Nicolas Cieller did something about improving performance of Float printing. Not sure what is the state yet....
On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 4:50 PM, Chris <cpmbai...@btinternet.com> wrote: > I often use the profiler :) > > The float printString is all fairly evenly split which is why I mention > about whether another implementation may be required. I'll always raise > anything much more obvious that I see! > > Hi Chris, > > My recommendation in this case is always do not spend a single second > trying to figure out what is the bottleneck by yourself. First thing ever > to do, is to run a profiler. You can do that very easily in Pharo. > > TimeProfiler spyOn: [ Transcript show: 'do something for real here to > benchmark'. > Object allSubclasses. ] > > replace the closure for what you want to benchmark. > > Then, share with us if you have interesting finds.... > > Cheers, > > > > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 3:52 PM, Chris <cpmbai...@btinternet.com> wrote: > >> I've been getting a little concerned with certain aspects of performance >> recently. Just a couple of examples off the top of my head were trying to >> do a printString on 200000 floats which takes over 3 seconds. If I do the >> same in Python it is only 0.25 seconds. Similarly reading 65000 points from >> a database with the PostgresV2 driver was about 800m/s and only 40 with >> psycopg. I'd have to try it again but am pretty sure going native was >> faster than OpenDBX as well. I appreciate Pharo is never going to be able >> to compete with the static-typed heavyweight languages but would hope we >> can get performance at least comparable to other dynamic languages :) Is it >> just that some method implementations are in need of some TLC; more things >> moved on top of C libraries and primitives and so forth rather than >> anything with the VM itself? >> >> Cheers >> Chris >> >> > > > -- > Mariano > http://marianopeck.wordpress.com > > > -- Mariano http://marianopeck.wordpress.com