Or, profile your application using a tool like Valgrind to find out what parts of your code in particular should be worth looking at for optimizing purposes. Remember the 90/10 rule: a 90 percent speed increase can be achieved by optimizing only 10 percent of your code.
On Wed, Sep 1, 2010 at 06:02, Taylor Carrasco <crackerbu...@gmail.com>wrote: > Is the code available for us to take a look at for possible optimizations > > On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 9:09 AM, alanm <m...@alandmoore.com> wrote: > >> I wrote a small browser in PyQT4 using QWebView, of course. The browser >> runs >> well and does what I need, but when I deployed it to my thin clients, it >> was >> far to slow to use. >> >> In fact, most modern browsers were; I had to settle on Epiphany because >> all >> the other browsers I tried were far to slow at showing or interacting with >> HTML controls (text inputs, drop-downs, etc). >> >> I tried disabling all QT effects in the Trolltech.conf file, and various >> graphicssystem settings on Qapplication, but it's still slow. >> >> Are there any other places where graphical effects can be toned down or >> optimized? I still notice a bit of a fade-in effect on drop-downs even >> when >> all QT Gui effects are disabled, and this is rendering really badly on the >> thin clients (slow and lots of screen artifacts). >> _______________________________________________ >> PyQt mailing list PyQt@riverbankcomputing.com >> http://www.riverbankcomputing.com/mailman/listinfo/pyqt >> > > > _______________________________________________ > PyQt mailing list PyQt@riverbankcomputing.com > http://www.riverbankcomputing.com/mailman/listinfo/pyqt > -- Nick Gaens
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