in reply to It's bad manners to slurp

Slightly relating issue. Is

while (local $_= each %hash) { .... }
better than
for (keys %hash) { .... }
? Does perl optimize the latter or does it build a possibly large temporary list of the keys? I know that with arrays,
for (@array) { .... }
is fast.

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Re: Re: It's bad manners to slurp
by BrowserUk (Patriarch) on May 02, 2004 at 17:31 UTC

    The for version creates a (potentially large) list, whereas the while version does not.

    The cost of allocating the list is offset against repeated calls to each, with the result that for small lists, for iterates faster, but on larger lists the while version wins out. A quick test show that the break even point on my system is around 8000 elements. YMMV

    use Benchmark qw[ cmpthese ]; $h{ $_ } = 0 for 1 .. 100; cmpthese( -3, { for => q[ $h{ $_ }++ for keys %h; ], while => q[ $h{ $_ }++ while $_ = each %h; ] }); Rate while for while 11937/s -- -23% for 15544/s 30% -- $h{ $_ } = 0 for 1 .. 1000; cmpthese( -3, { for => q[ $h{ $_ }++ for keys %h; ], while => q[ $h{ $_ }++ while $_ = each %h; ] }); Rate while for while 1165/s -- -26% for 1581/s 36% -- $h{ $_ } = 0 for 1 .. 10000; cmpthese( -3, { for => q[ $h{ $_ }++ for keys %h; ], while => q[ $h{ $_ }++ while $_ = each %h; ] } ); Rate for while for 80.0/s -- -8% while 86.9/s 9% -- $h{ $_ } = 0 for 1 .. 5000; cmpthese( -3, { for => q[ $h{ $_ }++ for keys %h; ], while => q[ $h{ $_ }++ while $_ = each %h; ] }); Rate while for while 207/s -- -15% for 243/s 17% -- $h{ $_ } = 0 for 1 .. 8000; cmpthese( -3, { for => q[ $h{ $_ }++ for keys %h; ], while => q[ $h{ $_ }++ while $_ = each %h; ] }); Rate for while for 119/s -- -0% while 119/s 0% --

    Examine what is said, not who speaks.
    "Efficiency is intelligent laziness." -David Dunham
    "Think for yourself!" - Abigail