On Tue, 17 May 2005 13:56:18 +0200, Peter Dembinski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Giovanni Bajo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: >> Peter Dembinski wrote: >> >>>> BTW, a typical performance optimization (not done automatically by >>>> python) is to hoist unchanging-value expressions out of loops, and >>>> obj.method is often such an expression, so you will this strategy >>>> when people try >>>> to squeeze extra performance from their programs. >>> >>> Good to know. Is there any advanced optimizer for Python code, >>> which would do such things for me (or suggest them, like pychecker >>> does for readability)? >> >> >> Prove that a.f() would not change the meaning of "a.f" after its >> invokation is close to impossible. > Many things in Python programs cannot be proved. But what about > suggesting optimisations, not doing them automatically? At that point, you can do the optimization yourself: class A: def method( self ): pass a = A( ) m = a.method # optimize runtime lookups for a.method for x in range( 10 ): m( ) Regards, Dan -- Dan Sommers <http://www.tombstonezero.net/dan/> -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list