instead of calling index repeatedly.
The tradeoff is:
- scanning a 4 character string for a single character.
- hashing a single character to a 32-bit hash and then performing a modulo 4 operation upon it.
Which actually favours the former:
#! perl -slw
use strict;
use Benchmark qw[ cmpthese ];
our %lookup = ( A=>0, B=>1, C=>2, D=>3 );
our $input = 'ACGT' x 1000;
cmpthese -1, {
index => q[
our( %lookup, $input );
my $n;
$n = index "ACGT", $_ for split '', $input;
],
hash => q[
our( %lookup, $input );
my $n;
$n = $lookup{ $_ } for split '', $input;
],
};
__END__
c:\test>junk5
Rate hash index
hash 107/s -- -21%
index 135/s 27% --
Examine what is said, not who speaks -- Silence betokens consent -- Love the truth but pardon error.
"Science is about questioning the status quo. Questioning authority".
In the absence of evidence, opinion is indistinguishable from prejudice.
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