The performance implication depends on your implementation. If it's a critical application, particularly one that iterates significantly, the difference may be significant. Conversely, if the code isn't iterative, or only sees a few iterations, the difference is likely neglible. Given this understanding, you may want to benchmark the codes using the Benchmark module:

use Benchmark qw(cmpthese); @data = (1,2,3,4); # the values that would have been in @_ my $minCPUsec = 15; cmpthese(-$minCPUsec, { with => \&sub_with_ifs, without => \&sub_without_ifs });

And change @_ in the referenced subs to @data.

Additionally, you may be interested in the Benchmarking Your Code tutorial, but I'd recommend using cmpthese instead of timethese.


In reply to Re^3: Badly need to call a function...:-) by eibwen
in thread Badly need to call a function...:-) by Mabooka-Mabooka

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