On Fri, 04 Feb 2011 15:44:46 -0500, Jeff Nowakowski <j...@dilacero.org> wrote:

On 02/03/2011 10:07 PM, Walter Bright wrote:

The way to get a high performance string parser in D is to take
advantage of one of D's unique features - slices. Java, C++, C#, etc.,
all rely on copying strings. With D you can just use slices into the
original XML source text. If you're copying the text, you're doing it
wrong.

Java's substring() does not copy the text, at least in the official JDK implementation. Unfortunately, it doesn't specify this behavior as part of the String API.

Yes, but Java's strings are immutable. Typically a buffered I/O stream has a mutable buffer used to read data. This necessitates a copy. At the very least, you need to continue allocating more memory to hold all the strings.

-Steve

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