Did you know it takes about 17,000 CPU instructions to print(“Hello”) in Python? And that it takes ~2 billion of them to import a module?

  • @Big_Boss_77
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    54 months ago

    Is it just me… or is there a lot of python hate lately?

    • Neo
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      24 months ago

      Nah, my personal hate of indented blocks has been there since the late 90s /s 8-)

      • flatbield
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        34 months ago

        Yes, I hate indentation as structure but I hate tracking brackets even more.

    • flatbield
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      4 months ago

      Same for me. I have used Python for most things since the late 1990s. Love Python. Have always hated the poor performance… but in my case mostly it was good enough. When it was not good enough, I wrote C code.

      Python is good for problems where time to code is the limiting factor. It sucks for compute bound problems where time to execute is the limiting factor. Most problems in my world are time to code limited but some are not.

      Python compute performance has always sucked.

      • @Big_Boss_77
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        24 months ago

        I get that… I’m not a developer, I’m a network engineer but I use a lot of python in my day to day operations. I always took python to be the “code for non-coders” which made it infinitely more approachable than some of the other languages.

        I’m not running the F1 grand prix over here, I’m driving to get groceries, so what if it’s not the fastest thing out there. Close enough is good enough for me. And in my experience that’s what people are using python for, daily driving.

      • @Big_Boss_77
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        14 months ago

        Ahh…that makes sense. I bet you’re right.

        • flatbield
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          4 months ago

          People use Python a lot as a Matlab, Excel/VBA, or R alternative. That was my use for many years. Some of these are compute focused problems and if the dataset is large enough and the computations complex enough then speed can be an issue.

          As far as loading packages and printing. Who cares. These are not computationally intensive and are typically IO bound.