On Tue, 2004-12-21 at 23:47, Justin Palmer wrote:
> *Sorry Curt for sending this to you.*
>
> Hi,
>
> Well if any one is interested in the speed I set up an example that you
> can go to. Though, when I run the example substr() is very neurotic (or
> it seems that it is to me). It can process the same line of code at a
> lot of different intervals, while accessing it with {} is pretty
> consistant.
>
> What is the cause of this?
>
> I thought it might be the server, but would that not effect it for both
> tests (two others tests with objects)?
>
> By the by, during my testing I found that using {} to access the first
> char in a string was anywhere from .5 to 4 times faster.
{} is an operator whereas substr() is a function. Operators are
generally an order of magnitude faster than functions and if all you
want is the first character then {0} is much more efficient than
substr().
Cheers,
Rob.
--
.------------------------------------------------------------.
| InterJinn Application Framework - http://www.interjinn.com |
:------------------------------------------------------------:
| An application and templating framework for PHP. Boasting |
| a powerful, scalable system for accessing system services |
| such as forms, properties, sessions, and caches. InterJinn |
| also provides an extremely flexible architecture for |
| creating re-usable components quickly and easily. |
`------------------------------------------------------------'
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php