Which “if” construct is faster - statement or ternary operator?

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借酒劲吻你
借酒劲吻你 2020-12-01 01:08

There are two types of if statements in java - classic: if {} else {} and shorthand: exp ? value1 : value2. Is one faster than the oth

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  • 2020-12-01 01:30

    These are the same. Both of them are fairly fast, typically around 10-30 nano-seconds. (depending on usage pattern) Is this time frame important to you?

    You should do what you believe is clearest.

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  • 2020-12-01 01:30

    neither - they will be compiled to the same.

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  • 2020-12-01 01:35

    There's only one type of "if" statement there. The other is a conditional expression. As to which will perform better: they could compile to the same bytecode, and I would expect them to behave identically - or so close that you definitely wouldn't want to choose one over the other in terms of performance.

    Sometimes an if statement will be more readable, sometimes the conditional operator will be more readable. In particular, I would recommend using the conditional operator when the two operands are simple and side-effect-free, whereas if the main purpose of the two branches is their side-effects, I'd probably use an if statement.

    Here's a sample program and bytecode:

    public class Test {
        public static void main(String[] args) {
            int x;
            if (args.length > 0) {
                x = 1;
            } else {
                x = 2;
            }
        }
    
        public static void main2(String[] args) {
            int x = (args.length > 0) ? 1 : 2;
        }
    }
    

    Bytecode decompiled with javap -c Test:

    public class Test extends java.lang.Object {
      public Test();
        Code:
           0: aload_0
           1: invokespecial #1
           4: return
    
      public static void main(java.lang.String[]
        Code:
           0: aload_0
           1: arraylength
           2: ifle          10
           5: iconst_1
           6: istore_1
           7: goto          12
          10: iconst_2
          11: istore_1
          12: return
    
      public static void main2(java.lang.String[
        Code:
           0: aload_0
           1: arraylength
           2: ifle          9
           5: iconst_1
           6: goto          10
           9: iconst_2
          10: istore_1
          11: return
    }
    

    As you can see, there is a slight difference in bytecode here - whether the istore_1 occurs within the brance or not (unlike my previous hugely-flawed attempt :) but I would be very surprised if the JITter ended up with different native code.

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  • 2020-12-01 01:37

    Ternary operator is faster than if-else condition.

    public class TerinaryTest {
        public static void main(String[] args)
        {
            int j = 2,i = 0;
            Date d1 = new Date();
            for(long l=1;l<100000000;l++)
                if(i==1) j=1;
                    else j=0;
            Date d2 = new Date();
            for(long l=1;l<100000000;l++)
                j=i==1?1:0;
            Date d3 = new Date();
            System.out.println("Time for if-else: " + (d2.getTime()-d1.getTime()));
            System.out.println("Time for ternary: " + (d3.getTime()-d2.getTime()));
        }
    }
    

    Test Results:

    Trail-1:

    Time for if-else: 63

    Time for ternary: 31

    Trail-2:

    Time for if-else: 78

    Time for ternary: 47

    Trail-3:

    Time for if-else: 94

    Time for ternary: 31

    Trail-4:

    Time for if-else: 78

    Time for ternary: 47

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  • 2020-12-01 01:49

    Both of your examples will probably compile to identical or nearly identical bytecode, so there should be no difference in performance.

    Had there been a difference in execution speed, you should still use the most idiomatic version (which would be the second one for assigning a single variable based on a simple condition and two simple sub-expressions, and the first one for doing more complex operations or operations that do not fit on a single line).

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  • 2020-12-01 01:52

    Just to add to all the other answers:

    The second expression is often called tertiary/ternary operator/statement. It can be very useful because it returns an expression. Sometimes it makes the code more clearer for typical short statements.

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