Mark Shannon added the comment: I don't remember why PyMem_Malloc rather than PyObject_MALLOC was used, it may have been inherited from the allocation of dict tables in the earlier implementation.
My only concern is that the benchmark only tests performance for very small dictionaries. The small object allocator is limited to 512 bytes before it falls back on malloc, so for larger dict keys the speed up would vanish. A benchmark with a range of sizes would be more convincing, if only to show that it is no slower for larger dicts. ---------- _______________________________________ Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org> <http://bugs.python.org/issue23601> _______________________________________ _______________________________________________ Python-bugs-list mailing list Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-bugs-list/archive%40mail-archive.com