On 2005-07-28, Sidd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I was recently reading an article on threading in python and I > came across Global Interpreter Lock,now as a novince in python > I was cusrious about > > 1.Is writing a threaded code in python going to perform well > than a normal python code.
It's sort of a corrolary to Amdahls law: on a single CPU machine, optimally written multi-threaded code will always perform worse than optimally written single-threaded code. [Where performance is in terms of CPU efficiency.] However, it may be very difficult to write optimal single-threaded code, and much easier to write (nearly) optimal multi-threaded code. So, in practice, multi-threaded code often performs better for certain classes of problems. > If so on what basis can it performance be measured. That's up to whoever is doing the measuring. > 2.Is writing a threaded code in python better than a code > written in C/C++ using PTHREADS. Define "better". On a multi-CPU machine you can get much more parallelism for compute-intensive tasks using C/pthreads than you can using Python threads. It's also a lot easier to write buggy code containing race conditions using C/pthreads. -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! I want to read my new at poem about pork brains and visi.com outer space... -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list