On Friday, December 13, 2013 11:58:51 AM UTC+5:30, Robert Voigtländer wrote: > >I've heard the term used often. It means something like, "performs > >well" or "runs fast". It may or may not be an English word, but that > >doesn't stop people from using it :-)
> > If "google" can be used to mean "make huge amouts of money with a > > product that is inherently flawed" then I'll happily accept "performant" > > as an English word, regardless of whether the English variant is UK, US, > > Australian, New Zealand, Soth African, Geordie, Glaswegian or any other :) > Indeed it's not an english word. I have to stop using it. In German > it's used with the meaning of "runs fast". Even though it's already > not that clearly defined there. > Thanks for the help on the topic of data aggregation. It helped a > lot and I again learned somthing. I have a performant .. well > .. fast running solution now. Well "performant" is performant enough for the purposes of communicating on the python list I think :D -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list