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This page is devoted to various tips and tricks that help improve the performance of your Python programs. Wherever the information comes from someone else, I've tried to identify the source.

Python has changed in some significant ways since I first wrote my "fast python" page in about 1996, which means that some of the orderings will have changed. I migrated it to the Python wiki in hopes others will help maintain it.

Note: You should always test these tips with your application and the version of Python you intend to use and not just blindly accept that one method is faster than another.

Also new since this was originally written are packages like [http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/~greg/python/Pyrex/ Pyrex], [http://psyco.sourceforge.net/ Psyco], [http://www.scipy.org/documentation/weave/ Weave] and [http://pyinline.sourceforge.net/ PyInline], which can dramatically improve your application's performance by making it easier to push performance-critical code into C or machine language.

Other Versions

Choose the Right Data Structure

TBD.

Sorting

Sorting lists of basic Python objects is generally pretty efficient. The sort method for lists takes an optional comparison function as an argument that can be used to change the sorting behavior. This is quite convenient, though it can significantly slow down your sorts, as the comparison function will be called many times. In Python 2.4, you should use the key argument to the built-in sort instead, which should be the fastest way to sort.

Only if you are using older versions of Python (before 2.4) does the following advice from Guido van Rossum apply:

An alternative way to speed up sorts is to construct a list of tuples whose first element is a sort key that will sort properly using the default comparison, and whose second element is the original list element. This is the so-called [http://www.google.com/search?q=Schwartzian+Transform Schwartzian Transform], also known as DecorateSortUndecorate (DSU).

Suppose, for example, you have a list of tuples that you want to sort by the n-th field of each tuple. The following function will do that.

def sortby(somelist, n):
    nlist = [(x[n], x) for x in somelist]
    nlist.sort()
    return [val for (key, val) in nlist]

Matching the behavior of the current list sort method (sorting in place) is easily achieved as well:

def sortby_inplace(somelist, n):
    somelist[:] = [(x[n], x) for x in somelist]
    somelist.sort()
    somelist[:] = [val for (key, val) in somelist]
    return

Here's an example use:

>>> somelist = [(1, 2, 'def'), (2, -4, 'ghi'), (3, 6, 'abc')]
>>> somelist.sort()
>>> somelist 
[(1, 2, 'def'), (2, -4, 'ghi'), (3, 6, 'abc')]
>>> nlist = sortby(somelist, 2)
>>> sortby_inplace(somelist, 2)
>>> nlist == somelist
True
>>> nlist = sortby(somelist, 1) 
>>> sortby_inplace(somelist, 1)
>>> nlist == somelist
True

From Tim Delaney

From Python 2.3 sort is guaranteed to be stable.

(to be precise, it's stable in CPython 2.3, and guaranteed to be stable in Python 2.4)

Python 2.4 adds an optional key parameter which makes the transform a lot easier to use:

import operator
sort(nlist, key=operator.itemgetter(n))

Note that the original item is never used for sorting, only the returned key - this is equivalent to doing:

nlist = [(x[n], i, x) for (i, x) in enumerate(nlist)]
nlist.sort()
nlist = [val for (key, index, val) in nlist]

String Concatenation

Strings in Python are immutable. This fact frequently sneaks up and bites novice Python programmers on the rump. Immutability confers some advantages and disadvantages. In the plus column, strings can be used as keys in dictionaries and individual copies can be shared among multiple variable bindings. (Python automatically shares one- and two-character strings.) In the minus column, you can't say something like, "change all the 'a's to 'b's" in any given string. Instead, you have to create a new string with the desired properties. This continual copying can lead to significant inefficiencies in Python programs. -> ConcatenationTestCode

Avoid this:

s = ""
for substring in list:
    s += substring

Use s = "".join(list) instead. The former is a very common and catastrophic mistake when building large strings. Similarly, if you are generating bits of a string sequentially instead of:

s = ""
for x in list:
    s += some_function(x)

use

slist = [some_function(elt) for elt in somelist]
s = "".join(slist)

Avoid:

out = "<html>" + head + prologue + query + tail + "</html>"

Instead, use

out = "<html>%s%s%s%s</html>" % (head, prologue, query, tail)

Even better, for readability (this has nothing to do with efficiency other than yours as a programmer), use dictionary substitution:

out = "<html>%(head)s%(prologue)s%(query)s%(tail)s</html>" % locals()

This last two are going to be much faster, especially when piled up over many CGI script executions, and easier to modify to boot. In addition, the slow way of doing things got slower in Python 2.0 with the addition of rich comparisons to the language. It now takes the Python virtual machine a lot longer to figure out how to concatenate two strings. (Don't forget that Python does all method lookup at runtime.)

Loops

Python supports a couple of looping constructs. The for statement is most commonly used. It loops over the elements of a sequence, assigning each to the loop variable. If the body of your loop is simple, the interpreter overhead of the for loop itself can be a substantial amount of the overhead. This is where the [http://www.python.org/doc/lib/built-in-funcs.html map] function is handy. You can think of map as a for moved into C code. The only restriction is that the "loop body" of map must be a function call. Note that the map function will be removed in [http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3000/#id38 Python 3000] in favor of list comprehensions.

Here's a straightforward example. Instead of looping over a list of words and converting them to upper case:

newlist = []
for word in oldlist:
    newlist.append(word.upper())

you can use map to push the loop from the interpreter into compiled C code:

newlist = map(str.upper, oldlist)

List comprehensions were added to Python in version 2.0 as well. They provide a syntactically more compact way of writing the above for loop:

newlist = [s.upper() for s in oldlist]

Generator expressions were added to Python in version 2.4. They function more-or-less like list comprehensions or map but avoid the overhead of generating the entire list at once. Instead, they return a generator object which can be iterated over bit-by-bit:

newlist = (s.upper() for s in oldlist)

Which method is appropriate will depend on what version of Python you're using and the characteristics of the data you are manipulating.

Guido van Rossum wrote a much more detailed (and succinct) examination of [http://www.python.org/doc/essays/list2str.html loop optimization] that is definitely worth reading.

Avoiding dots...

Suppose you can't use map or a list comprehension? You may be stuck with the for loop. The for loop example has another inefficiency. Both newlist.append and word.upper are function references that are reevaluated each time through the loop. The original loop can be replaced with:

upper = str.upper
newlist = []
append = newlist.append
for word in list:
    append(upper(word))

This technique should be used with caution. It gets more difficult to maintain if the loop is large. Unless you are intimately familiar with that piece of code you will find yourself scanning up to check the definitions of append and upper.

Local Variables

The final speedup available to us for the non-map version of the for loop is to use local variables wherever possible. If the above loop is cast as a function, append and upper become local variables. Python accesses local variables much more efficiently than global variables.

def func():
    upper = str.upper
    newlist = []
    append = newlist.append
    for word in words:
        append(upper(word))
    return newlist

At the time I originally wrote this I was using a 100MHz Pentium running BSDI. I got the following times for converting the list of words in /usr/share/dict/words (38,470 words at that time) to upper case:

Version                         Time (seconds)
Basic loop                      3.47
Eliminate dots                  2.45
Local variable & no dots        1.79
Using map function              0.54

Initializing Dictionary Elements

Suppose you are building a dictionary of word frequencies and you've already broken your text up into a list of words. You might execute something like:

wdict = {}
for word in words:
    if word not in wdict:
        wdict[word] = 0
    wdict[word] += 1

Except for the first time, each time a word is seen the if statement's test fails. If you are counting a large number of words, many will probably occur multiple times. In a situation where the initialization of a value is only going to occur once and the augmentation of that value will occur many times it is cheaper to use a try statement:

wdict = {}
for word in words:
    try:
        wdict[word] += 1
    except KeyError:
        wdict[word] = 1

It's important to catch the expected KeyError exception, and not have a default except clause to avoid trying to recover from an exception you really can't handle by the statement(s) in the try clause.

A third alternative became available with the release of Python 2.x. Dictionaries now have a get() method which will return a default value if the desired key isn't found in the dictionary. This simplifies the loop:

wdict = {}
get = wdict.get
for word in words:
    wdict[word] = get(word, 0) + 1

When I originally wrote this section, there were clear situations where one of the first two approaches was faster. It seems that all three approaches now exhibit similar performance (within about 10% of each other), more or less independent of the properties of the list of words.

Also, if the value stored in the dictionary is an object or a (mutable) list, you could also use the dict.setdefault method, e.g.

...
    wdict.setdefault(key, []).append(new_element)

This avoids having to lookup the key twice.

Import Statement Overhead

import statements can be executed just about anywhere. It's often useful to place them inside functions to restrict their visibility and/or reduce initial startup time. Although Python's interpreter is optimized to not import the same module multiple times, repeatedly executing an import statement can seriously affect performance in some circumstances.

Consider the following two snippets of code (originally from Greg McFarlane, I believe - I found it unattributed in a comp.lang.python python-list@python.org posting and later attributed to him in another source):

def doit1():
    import string             ###### import statement inside function
    string.lower('Python')

for num in range(100000):
    doit1()

or:

import string             ###### import statement outside function
def doit2():
    string.lower('Python')

for num in range(100000):
    doit2()

doit2 will run much faster than doit1, even though the reference to the string module is global in doit2. Here's a Python interpreter session run using Python 2.3 and the new timeit module, which shows how much faster the second is than the first:

>>> def doit1():
...   import string
...   string.lower('Python')
... 
>>> import string
>>> def doit2():
...   string.lower('Python')
... 
>>> import timeit
>>> t = timeit.Timer(setup='from __main__ import doit1', stmt='doit1()')
>>> t.timeit()
11.479144930839539
>>> t = timeit.Timer(setup='from __main__ import doit2', stmt='doit2()')
>>> t.timeit()
4.6661689281463623

String methods were introduced to the language in Python 2.0. These provide a version that avoids the import completely and runs even faster:

def doit3():
    'Python'.lower()

for num in range(100000):
    doit3()

Here's the proof from timeit:

>>> def doit3():
...   'Python'.lower()
... 
>>> t = timeit.Timer(setup='from __main__ import doit3', stmt='doit3()')
>>> t.timeit()
2.5606080293655396

The above example is obviously a bit contrived, but the general principle holds.

Note that putting an import in a function can speed up the initial loading of the module, especially if the imported module might not be required. This is generally a case of a "lazy" optimization -- avoiding work (importing a module, which can be very expensive) until you are sure it is required.

This is only a significant saving in cases where the module wouldn't have been imported at all (from any module) -- if the module is already loaded (as will be the case for many standard modules, like string or re), avoiding an import doesn't save you anything. To see what modules are loaded in the system look in sys.modules.

A good way to do lazy imports is:

email = None

def parse_email():
    global email
    if email is None:
        import email
    ...

This way the email module will only be imported once, on the first invocation of parse_email().

Data Aggregation

Function call overhead in Python is relatively high, especially compared with the execution speed of a builtin function. This strongly suggests that where appropriate, functions should handle data aggregates. Here's a contrived example written in Python.

import time
x = 0
def doit1(i):
    global x
    x = x + i

list = range(100000)
t = time.time()
for i in list:
    doit1(i)

print "%.3f" % (time.time()-t)

vs.

import time
x = 0
def doit2(list):
    global x
    for i in list:
        x = x + i

list = range(100000)
t = time.time()
doit2(list)
print "%.3f" % (time.time()-t)

Here's the proof in the pudding using an interactive session:

>>> t = time.time()
>>> for i in list:
...     doit1(i)
... 
>>> print "%.3f" % (time.time()-t)
0.758
>>> t = time.time()
>>> doit2(list)
>>> print "%.3f" % (time.time()-t)
0.204

Even written in Python, the second example runs about four times faster than the first. Had doit been written in C the difference would likely have been even greater (exchanging a Python for loop for a C for loop as well as removing most of the function calls).

Doing Stuff Less Often

The Python interpreter performs some periodic checks. In particular, it decides whether or not to let another thread run and whether or not to run a pending call (typically a call established by a signal handler). Most of the time there's nothing to do, so performing these checks each pass around the interpreter loop can slow things down. There is a function in the sys module, setcheckinterval, which you can call to tell the interpreter how often to perform these periodic checks. Prior to the release of Python 2.3 it defaulted to 10. In 2.3 this was raised to 100. If you aren't running with threads and you don't expect to be catching many signals, setting this to a larger value can improve the interpreter's performance, sometimes substantially.

Python is not C

It is also not Perl, Java, C++ or Haskell. Be careful when transferring your knowledge of how other languages perform to Python. A simple example serves to demonstrate:

% timeit.py -s 'x = 47' 'x * 2'
1000000 loops, best of 3: 0.574 usec per loop
% timeit.py -s 'x = 47' 'x << 1'
1000000 loops, best of 3: 0.524 usec per loop
% timeit.py -s 'x = 47' 'x + x'
1000000 loops, best of 3: 0.382 usec per loop

Now consider the similar C programs (only the add version is shown):

#include <stdio.h>

int
main (int argc, char **argv) {
        int i = 47;
        int loop;
        for (loop=0; loop<500000000; loop++)
                i + i;
}

and the execution times:

% for prog in mult add shift ; do
< for i in 1 2 3 ; do
<   echo -n "$prog: "
<   /usr/bin/time ./$prog
< done
< echo
< done
mult:         6.12 real         5.64 user         0.01 sys
mult:         6.08 real         5.50 user         0.04 sys
mult:         6.10 real         5.45 user         0.03 sys

add:          6.07 real         5.54 user         0.00 sys
add:          6.08 real         5.60 user         0.00 sys
add:          6.07 real         5.58 user         0.01 sys

shift:        6.09 real         5.55 user         0.01 sys
shift:        6.10 real         5.62 user         0.01 sys
shift:        6.06 real         5.50 user         0.01 sys

Note that there is a significant advantage in Python to adding a number to itself instead of multiplying it by two or shifting it left by one bit. In C on all modern computer architectures, each of the three arithmetic operations are translated into a single machine instruction which executes in one cycle, so it doesn't really matter which one you choose.

A common "test" new Python programmers often perform is to translate the common Perl idiom

while (<>) {
    print;
}

into Python code that looks something like

import fileinput

for line in fileinput.input():
    print line,

and use it to conclude that Python must be much slower than Perl. As others have pointed out numerous times, Python is slower than Perl for some things and faster for others. Relative performance also often depends on your experience with the two languages.

Use xrange instead of range

Python has two ways to get a range of numbers: range and xrange. Most people know about range, because of its obvious name. xrange, being way down near the end of the alphabet, is much less well-known.

xrange is a generator object, basically equivalent to the following Python 2.3 code:

def xrange(start, stop=None, step=1):
    if stop is None:
        stop = start
        start = 0
    else:
        stop = int(stop)
    start = int(start)
    step = int(step)

    while start < stop:
        yield start
        start += step

Except that it is implemented in pure C.

xrange does have limitations. Specifically, it only works with ints; you cannot use longs or floats (they will be converted to ints, as shown above).

It does, however, save gobs of memory, and unless you store the yielded objects somewhere, only one yielded object will exist at a time. The difference is thus: When you call range, it creates a list containing so many number (int, long, or float) objects. All of those objects are created at once, and all of them exist at the same time. This can be a pain when the number of numbers is large.

xrange, on the other hand, creates no numbers immediately - only the range object itself. Number objects are created only when you pull on the generator, e.g. by looping through it. For example:

xrange(sys.maxint) # No loop, and no call to .next, so no numbers are instantiated

And for this reason, the code runs instantly. If you substitute range there, Python will lock up; it will be too busy allocating sys.maxint number objects (about 2.1 billion on the typical PC) to do anything else. Eventually, it will run out of memory and exit.

In Python versions before 2.2, xrange objects also supported optimizations such as fast membership testing (i in xrange(n)). These features were removed in 2.2 due to lack of use.

Profiling Code

The first step to speeding up your program is learning where the bottlenecks lie. It hardly makes sense to optimize code that is never executed or that already runs fast. I use two modules to help locate the hotspots in my code, profile and trace. In later examples I also use the timeit module, which is new in Python 2.3.

Profile Module

The [http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-profile.html profile module] is included as a standard module in the Python distribution. Using it to profile the execution of a set of functions is quite easy. Suppose your main function is called main, takes no arguments and you want to execute it under the control of the profile module. In its simplest form you just execute

import profile
profile.run('main()')

When main() returns, the profile module will print a table of function calls and execution times. The output can be tweaked using the Stats class included with the module. In Python 2.4 profile will allow the time consumed by Python builtins and functions in extension modulesto be profiled as well.

Hotshot Module

New in Python 2.2, the [http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-hotshot.html hotshot package] is intended as a replacement for the profile module. The underlying module is written in C, so using hotshot should result in a much smaller performance hit, and thus a more accurate idea of how your application is performing. There is also a hotshotmain.py program in the distributions Tools/scripts directory which makes it easy to run your program under hotshot control from the command line.

Trace Module

The [http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-trace.html trace module] is a spin-off of the profile module I wrote originally to perform some crude statement level test coverage. It's been heavily modified by several other people since I released my initial crude effort. As of Python 2.0 you should find trace.py in the Tools/scripts directory of the Python distribution. Starting with Python 2.3 it's in the standard library (the Lib directory). You can copy it to your local bin directory and set the execute permission, then execute it directly. It's easy to run from the command line to trace execution of whole scripts:

% trace.py -t spam.py eggs

In Python 2.4 it's even easier to run. Just execute python -m trace.

There's no separate documentation, but you can execute "pydoc trace" to view the inline documentation.

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