Chris Rebert wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 8, 2010 at 2:25 AM, alexru wrote:
>> Is there any standardized interpreter speed evaluation tool? Say I
>> made few changes in interpreter code and want to know if those changes
>> made python any better, which test should I use?
>
On Fri, Jan 8, 2010 at 2:25 AM, alexru wrote:
> Is there any standardized interpreter speed evaluation tool? Say I
> made few changes in interpreter code and want to know if those changes
> made python any better, which test should I use?
Although apparently undocumented, test.pyston
On 1/8/2010 5:25 AM, alexru wrote:
Is there any standardized interpreter speed evaluation tool? Say I
made few changes in interpreter code and want to know if those changes
made python any better, which test should I use?
The Unladen Swallow (sp?) project at code.google.com/, which looks
alexru wrote:
Is there any standardized interpreter speed evaluation tool? Say I
made few changes in interpreter code and want to know if those changes
made python any better, which test should I use?
Not trying to be a smart-aleck, but the test you use should reflect your
definition of the
alexru schrieb:
Is there any standardized interpreter speed evaluation tool? Say I
made few changes in interpreter code and want to know if those changes
made python any better, which test should I use?
Pybench I guess.
Diez
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Is there any standardized interpreter speed evaluation tool? Say I
made few changes in interpreter code and want to know if those changes
made python any better, which test should I use?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list