I know all that.

I just had not realized that they place the array right at the beginning of the space allocated. I guess I shouldn't be surprised, after all that is the same algorithmic mistake they made on map.

Look at the following:

use strict; use Benchmark; use vars qw(%hash %test); %test = ( shift => sub { my @tmp = map "foo", 1..10000; foreach (@tmp) { my $val = shift @tmp; unshift @tmp, $val; } }, pop => sub { my @tmp = map "foo", 1..10000; foreach (@tmp) { my $val = pop @tmp; push @tmp, $val; } }, ); timethese (-5, \%test); __END__ Benchmark: running pop, shift, each for at least 5 CPU seconds... pop: 7 wallclock secs ( 6.60 usr + 0.00 sys = 6.60 CPU) @ 6 +.67/s (n=44) shift: 7 wallclock secs ( 6.27 usr + 0.00 sys = 6.27 CPU) @ 6 +.70/s (n=42)
When you have the space available, unshift is not appreciably slower. Just place the new array 1/16 of the way off from whichever way it is being moved. The memory wastage is insignificant, push is also pretty much the same speed, and unshift will become fast.

*sigh*


In reply to RE (tilly) 5 (less?): A Not so Simple Append by tilly
in thread A Not so Simple Append by Limo

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