[#98621] Re: Function getlogin_r()'s protoype] — Bertram Scharpf <lists@...>
FYI,
3 messages
2020/06/02
[#98947] [Ruby master Feature#16986] Anonymous Struct literal — ko1@...
Issue #16986 has been reported by ko1 (Koichi Sasada).
66 messages
2020/06/26
[#98962] [Ruby master Bug#16988] Kernel.load loads file from current directory without '.' in path — misharinn@...
Issue #16988 has been reported by TheSmartnik (Nikita Misharin).
5 messages
2020/06/26
[#98969] [Ruby master Feature#16994] Sets: shorthand for frozen sets of symbols / strings — marcandre-ruby-core@...
Issue #16994 has been reported by marcandre (Marc-Andre Lafortune).
7 messages
2020/06/26
[#100117] [Ruby master Feature#16994] Sets: shorthand for frozen sets of symbols / strings
— matz@...
2020/09/25
Issue #16994 has been updated by matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto).
[ruby-core:98919] [Ruby master Feature#16897] General purpose memoizer in Ruby 3 with Ruby 2 performance
From:
sam.saffron@...
Date:
2020-06-23 05:00:09 UTC
List:
ruby-core #98919
Issue #16897 has been updated by sam.saffron (Sam Saffron).
> In terms of usability, matz seems to like handling *args, **kwargs because it is explicit and not so complex.
To me the design we arrived at is very very non-intuitive sadly, @matz
```
def bar(a: 1)
end
def foo(*x)
puts x
bar(*x)
end
```
`*x` captures both kwargs and args, yet is is not allowed to pass kwargs along.
`foo(a: 1)` will print `{a: 1}` and then error out. This is very bad usability in the language.
If there is strong insistence on separation we should do so properly.
`foo(a: 1)` should throw an exception cause it only captures args an not kwargs. At least that would guide people at the right direction.
My preference remains :
1. Best... fix *x so it is able to delegate kwargs properly 100% of the time, `foo(a: 1)` should work, `foo({a: 1})` should exception. This means we codify and make official `{}.kwargs?` or something like that.
2. Second best is introducing ***x and Arguments
But the current status quo is a huge trap we are leaving for future Ruby generations.
----------------------------------------
Feature #16897: General purpose memoizer in Ruby 3 with Ruby 2 performance
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16897#change-86298
* Author: sam.saffron (Sam Saffron)
* Status: Open
* Priority: Normal
----------------------------------------
```ruby
require 'benchmark/ips'
module Memoizer
def memoize_26(method_name)
cache = {}
uncached = "#{method_name}_without_cache"
alias_method uncached, method_name
define_method(method_name) do |*arguments|
found = true
data = cache.fetch(arguments) { found = false }
unless found
cache[arguments] = data = public_send(uncached, *arguments)
end
data
end
end
def memoize_27(method_name)
cache = {}
uncached = "#{method_name}_without_cache"
alias_method uncached, method_name
define_method(method_name) do |*args, **kwargs|
found = true
all_args = [args, kwargs]
data = cache.fetch(all_args) { found = false }
unless found
cache[all_args] = data = public_send(uncached, *args, **kwargs)
end
data
end
end
def memoize_27_v2(method_name)
uncached = "#{method_name}_without_cache"
alias_method uncached, method_name
cache = "MEMOIZE_#{method_name}"
params = instance_method(method_name).parameters
has_kwargs = params.any? {|t, name| "#{t}".start_with? "key"}
has_args = params.any? {|t, name| !"#{t}".start_with? "key"}
args = []
args << "args" if has_args
args << "kwargs" if has_kwargs
args_text = args.map do |n|
n == "args" ? "*args" : "**kwargs"
end.join(",")
class_eval <<~RUBY
#{cache} = {}
def #{method_name}(#{args_text})
found = true
all_args = #{args.length === 2 ? "[args, kwargs]" : args[0]}
data = #{cache}.fetch(all_args) { found = false }
unless found
#{cache}[all_args] = data = public_send(:#{uncached} #{args.empty? ? "" : ", #{args_text}"})
end
data
end
RUBY
end
end
module Methods
def args_only(a, b)
sleep 0.1
"#{a} #{b}"
end
def kwargs_only(a:, b: nil)
sleep 0.1
"#{a} #{b}"
end
def args_and_kwargs(a, b:)
sleep 0.1
"#{a} #{b}"
end
end
class OldMethod
extend Memoizer
include Methods
memoize_26 :args_and_kwargs
memoize_26 :args_only
memoize_26 :kwargs_only
end
class NewMethod
extend Memoizer
include Methods
memoize_27 :args_and_kwargs
memoize_27 :args_only
memoize_27 :kwargs_only
end
class OptimizedMethod
extend Memoizer
include Methods
memoize_27_v2 :args_and_kwargs
memoize_27_v2 :args_only
memoize_27_v2 :kwargs_only
end
OptimizedMethod.new.args_only(1,2)
methods = [
OldMethod.new,
NewMethod.new,
OptimizedMethod.new
]
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.warmup = 1
x.time = 2
methods.each do |m|
x.report("#{m.class} args only") do |times|
while times > 0
m.args_only(10, b: 10)
times -= 1
end
end
x.report("#{m.class} kwargs only") do |times|
while times > 0
m.kwargs_only(a: 10, b: 10)
times -= 1
end
end
x.report("#{m.class} args and kwargs") do |times|
while times > 0
m.args_and_kwargs(10, b: 10)
times -= 1
end
end
end
x.compare!
end
# # Ruby 2.6.5
# #
# OptimizedMethod args only: 974266.9 i/s
# OldMethod args only: 949344.9 i/s - 1.03x slower
# OldMethod args and kwargs: 945951.5 i/s - 1.03x slower
# OptimizedMethod kwargs only: 939160.2 i/s - 1.04x slower
# OldMethod kwargs only: 868229.3 i/s - 1.12x slower
# OptimizedMethod args and kwargs: 751797.0 i/s - 1.30x slower
# NewMethod args only: 730594.4 i/s - 1.33x slower
# NewMethod args and kwargs: 727300.5 i/s - 1.34x slower
# NewMethod kwargs only: 665003.8 i/s - 1.47x slower
#
# #
# # Ruby 2.7.1
#
# OptimizedMethod kwargs only: 1021707.6 i/s
# OptimizedMethod args only: 955694.6 i/s - 1.07x (0.00) slower
# OldMethod args and kwargs: 940911.3 i/s - 1.09x (ア 0.00) slower
# OldMethod args only: 930446.1 i/s - 1.10x (ア 0.00) slower
# OldMethod kwargs only: 858238.5 i/s - 1.19x (ア 0.00) slower
# OptimizedMethod args and kwargs: 773773.5 i/s - 1.32x (ア 0.00) slower
# NewMethod args and kwargs: 772653.3 i/s - 1.32x (ア 0.00) slower
# NewMethod args only: 771253.2 i/s - 1.32x (ア 0.00) slower
# NewMethod kwargs only: 700604.1 i/s - 1.46x (ア 0.00) slower
```
The bottom line is that a generic delegator often needs to make use of all the arguments provided to a method.
```ruby
def count(*args, **kwargs)
counter[[args, kwargs]] += 1
orig_count(*args, **kwargs)
end
```
The old pattern meant we could get away with one less array allocation per:
```ruby
def count(*args)
counter[args] += 1
orig_count(*args, **kwargs)
end
```
I would like to propose some changes to Ruby 3 to allow to recover this performance.
Perhaps:
```ruby
def count(...)
args = ...
counter[args] += 1
orig_count(...)
end
```
Or:
```ruby
def count(***args)
counter[args] += 1
orig_count(***args)
end
```
Thoughts?
--
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=unsubscribe>
<http://lists.ruby-lang.org/cgi-bin/mailman/options/ruby-core>