[
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/FLEX-35330?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16061882#comment-16061882
]
Justin Mclean commented on FLEX-35330:
--------------------------------------
Here's what I get for Safari 10.1.1
Uninitialised != : 18
Uninitialised !== : 16
Null initialised != : 16
Null initialised !== : 14
Uninitialised != : 18
Uninitialised !== : 16
Null initialised != : 16
Null initialised !== : 14
Uninitialised != : 18
Uninitialised !== : 17
Null initialised != : 17
Null initialised !== : 14
Uninitialised != : 19
Uninitialised !== : 16
Null initialised != : 17
Null initialised !== : 15
Uninitialised != : 17
Uninitialised !== : 16
Null initialised != : 17
Null initialised !== : 15
> [FlexJS] comparison of objects using non strict inequality or non strict
> equality is slow
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: FLEX-35330
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/FLEX-35330
> Project: Apache Flex
> Issue Type: Bug
> Affects Versions: Apache FlexJS 0.7.0
> Reporter: Justin Mclean
>
> Code use to test:
> {code}
> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
> <js:Application xmlns:fx="http://ns.adobe.com/mxml/2009"
> xmlns:js="library://ns.apache.org/flexjs/basic"
> applicationComplete="init()">
> <js:valuesImpl>
> <js:SimpleCSSValuesImpl/>
> </js:valuesImpl>
> <fx:Script><![CDATA[
> protected function init():void
> {
> var start:Date;
> var end:Date;
> var took:Number;
> var obj1:Object;
> var obj2:Object;
> var obj3:Object = null;
> var obj4:Object = null;
> var i:int;
> var j:int;
> j = 0;
> start = new Date();
> for (i = 0; i < 1e7; i++) {
> if (obj1 != null) {
> j++;
> }
> }
> end = new Date();
> took = end.getTime() - start.getTime();
> trace("Uninitialised != : " + took);
> j = 0;
> start = new Date();
> for (i = 0; i < 1e7; i++) {
> if (obj2 !== null) {
> j++;
> }
> }
> end = new Date();
> took = end.getTime() - start.getTime();
> trace("Uninitialised !== : " + took);
> j = 0;
> start = new Date();
> for (i = 0; i < 1e7; i++) {
> if (obj3 != null) {
> j++;
> }
> }
> end = new Date();
> took = end.getTime() - start.getTime();
> trace("Null initialised != : " + took);
> j = 0;
> start = new Date();
> for (i = 0; i < 1e7; i++) {
> if (obj4 !== undefined) {
> j++;
> }
> }
> end = new Date();
> took = end.getTime() - start.getTime();
> trace("Null initialised !== : " + took);
> }
> ]]></fx:Script>
> <js:initialView>
> <js:View percentWidth="100" percentHeight="100">
> <js:Label id="result" />
> </js:View>
> </js:initialView>
> </js:Application>
> {code}
> Output of 5 consecutive tests:
> Uninitialised != : 18
> Uninitialised !== : 18
> Null initialised != : 16
> Null initialised !== : 13
> Uninitialised != : 20
> Uninitialised !== : 18
> Null initialised != : 17
> Null initialised !== : 14
> Uninitialised != : 18
> Uninitialised !== : 19
> Null initialised != : 16
> Null initialised !== : 14
> Uninitialised != : 18
> Uninitialised !== : 18
> Null initialised != : 16
> Null initialised !== : 14
> Uninitialised != : 19
> Uninitialised !== : 18
> Null initialised != : 17
> Null initialised !== : 14
> Smaller numbers are faster. Run on Chrome 55 on OSX.
> You can see about a 35% performance increase.
> Note there is also a small performance increase in use non strict inequality
> and assigning to null.
--
This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA
(v6.4.14#64029)