Super Spinner wrote: > IronPython is a .NET language, so does that mean that it invokes the > JIT before running actual code? If so, then "simple short scripts" > would take longer with IronPython "busy starting itself" loading .NET > and invoking the JIT. This effect would be less noticable, the longer > the program is. But I'm just guessing; I've not used IronPython. > The time of loading IronPython seem to pay out at the end if the script takes a longer time to run, so you are most probably right. I am a bit surprised, that the difference is not that big (e.g. at least half the time) as I have expected from a JIT concept ... :
<code> # import psyco # psyco.full() def arccot(x, unity): sum = xpower = unity // x n = 3 sign = -1 while 1: xpower = xpower // (x*x) term = xpower // n if not term: break sum += sign * term sign = -sign n += 2 return sum def pi(digits): print ' start of setting unity value ...', unity = 10**(digits + 10) print ' set unity value, starting arccot() ... ', pi = 4 * (4*arccot(5, unity) - arccot(239, unity)) return pi // 10**10 f = file("pi-decimal-100000digits.out","wb") f.write(str(pi(100000))) print """ PC: Pentium 4, 2.8 GHz, Windows XP SP2 writing 100.000 digits of Pi to a file takes using: CPython 2.4.2 : 2 min 41 s (of CPU time) CPython+Psyco : 2 min 45 s (of CPU time) IronPython 1.0 : 1 min 48 s (of CPU time) """ </code> Claudio Grondi -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list