Perhaps ~this~ is what you are worried about performance-wise? Image Name Mem Usage ----------------------------- python.exe 11,096 K
That's not too bad considering ~this~ explorer.exe 14,356 K svchost.exe 24,000 K And I worry about the mp3 player I wrote in C using 2,520 K I keep thinking I could cut that down if I mess with the compiler settings ;-) I wouldn't worry about it too much. Reading the whole file in at once is a performance issue when you are dealing with millions and millions of lines of text. An example is DNA sequences. Or databases. JS > max baseman wrote: >> cool thanks >> >> oh for performance eventualy i would like the file to contain many quotes > Using readlines isn't exactly going to cause a performance bottleneck. > I used the following code > #make the file.py > f = file("temp.txt","w") > x = 100000 > while x > 0: > f.write("aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa\n") > x -= 1 > f.close() > #------- > this creates a file with a whole lot of lines of 'a's. > 100,000 lines, to be exact, and 4,200,000 bytes. > > In other words, this is a fair approximation for if you had, say, 25,000 > quotes (since your quotes are likely to be, on average, longer than the > amount of 'a's I used.) > I think you'll agree that that's quite a few quotes. > > Now how long does it take to use readlines() on this file? > > #test performance.py > import timeit > string = "f = file('temp.txt','r');f.readlines();f.close()" > temp = timeit.Timer(stmt=string) > print "1000 iterations took: " + str(temp.timeit(1000)) > #----- > what this code does is opens, reads all the text of the file, and closes > the file. > We call timeit with 1000 as the argument, so it repeats this process > 1000 times. > > The output of this program on my machine is: > 1000 iterations took: 51.0771701431 > > In other words, if you have 25,000 quotes, you could read all of them > into memory in 51.07717/1000 (approximately) > or 0.05107 seconds. And I'm skeptical that you would even have that > many quotes. > So, like i said before, I doubt this will cause any significant > performance problem in pretty much any normal situation. > > Also, by the way - please reply to me on-list so that others get the > benefit of our conversations. > -Luke _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor