A test with longer strings shows that the non-greedy regex can be about 25% faster (with perl 5.8.7). My test case regex is designed to match starting near the beginning of the string and ending in the middle.
$ perl -MBenchmark=cmpthese -ne'chomp; $allwords.="/$_";
END{
cmpthese(-3,
{
"Greedy"=>sub {
$allwords=~m{/abbreviate.+/initial/};
},
"Nongreedy"=>sub {
$allwords=~m{/abbreviate.+?/initial/};
}
}
);
}' /usr/dict/words
The result is:
Rate Greedy Nongreedy
Greedy 439/s -- -22%
Nongreedy 563/s 28% --
Of course, to repeat this test you'll need /usr/dict/words, and it has to contain abbreviate and initial.
These results are with perl 5.8.7 - I'd be curious to see what happens with 5.8.10, since RE improvements could happen any time.
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