Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Apr 6, 8:41 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > I'm trying to minimise the overheads of a small Python utility, I'm > > not really too fussed about how fast it is but I would like to > > minimise its loading effect on the system as it could be called lots > > of times (and, no, I don't think there's an easy way of keeping it > > running and using the same copy repeatedly). > > > > It needs a configuration file of some sort which I want to keep > > separate from the code, is there thus anything to choose between a > > configuration file that I read after:- > > > > f = open("configFile", 'r') > > > > ... and importing a configuration written as python dictionaries or > > whatever:- > > > > import myConfig > > > > -- > > Chris Green > > Chris - > > The question is less an issue of the file overhead (both must open a > file, read its contents, and then close it) than what is done with the > file contents afterwards. > > A config file containing .INI-style or whatever content will need to > be parsed into Python data/objects, and likely use Python code to do > so. An import will use the Python compiler itself, using optimized > compiled C code to do the parsing and data/object construction. But I > think you would only see the distinction in a config file of > substantial size or complexity. If you think this will make a > substantial difference in performance, then code up a test case and > time it. > > In general, I'd say that splitting performance hairs to tip a design > choice one way or another is a misguided premature optimization. > I quite agree (about the splitting hairs bit that is), as I said before I just wanted to check that I wasn't missing anything really obvious and, thus, that there probably isn't much to choose between the two approaches. Therefore I'll decide which way to do it on the basis of 'usability'.
-- Chris Green -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list