Is Swift really slow at dealing with numbers?

十年热恋 提交于 2019-12-03 03:33:33

问题


As I was playing around with a swift tutorial, I started to write a custom isPrime method to check if a given Int is prime or not.

After writing it I realized it was working properly but found it a bit slow to perform isPrime on some quite large numbers (still much lower then Int.max).

So I wrote the same piece of code in objc and the code was executed much faster (a factor of 66x).

Here is the swift code:

class Swift {
    class func isPrime(n:Int) -> Bool {
        let sqr : Int = Int(sqrt(Double(n))) + 1
        for i in 2...sqr {
            if n % i == 0 {
                return false
            }
        }
        return true;
    }
    class func primesInRange(start:Int, end:Int) -> Int[] {
        var primes:Int[] = Int[]()
        for n in start...end {
            if self.isPrime(n) {
                primes.append(n)
            }
        }
        return primes;
    }
}

And the objc code:

@implementation Utils

+ (BOOL)isPrime:(NSUInteger)n {
    NSInteger sqr = (NSUInteger)(sqrt(n))+1;
    for (NSUInteger i = 2; i < sqr; ++i) {
        if (n % i == 0) {
            return false;
        }
    }
    return YES;
}

+ (NSArray*)primesInRange:(NSUInteger)start end:(NSUInteger)end {
    NSMutableArray* primes = [NSMutableArray array];
    for (NSUInteger i = start; i <= end; ++i) {
        if ([self isPrime:i])
            [primes addObject:@(i)];
    }

    return primes.copy;
}

@end

And in main.swift:

let startDateSwift = NSDate.date()
let swiftPrimes = Swift.primesInRange(1_040_101_022_000, end: 1_040_101_022_200)
let elapsedSwift = NSDate.date().timeIntervalSinceDate(startDateSwift)*1000

let startDateObjc = NSDate.date()
let objcPrimes = Utils.primesInRange(1_040_101_022_000, end: 1_040_101_022_200)
let elapsedObjc = NSDate.date().timeIntervalSinceDate(startDateObjc)*1000

println("\(swiftPrimes) took: \(elapsedSwift)ms");
println("\(objcPrimes) took: \(elapsedObjc)ms");

This produces:

[1040101022027, 1040101022039, 1040101022057, 1040101022099, 1040101022153] took: 3953.82004976273ms
[1040101022027, 1040101022039, 1040101022057, 1040101022099, 1040101022153] took: 66.4250254631042ms

I know that I could have used an extension on Int here to check if a number is prime, but I wanted both code to be very similar.

Can anyone tell me why this swift code is so much slower? The 66x factor is pretty scary and only gets worse as I increment the range.


回答1:


Here are optimization levels for the Swift compiler's code generation (you can find them in Build Settings):

[-Onone] no optimizations, the default for debug.
[-O]     perform optimizations, the default for release.
[-Ofast] perform optimizations and disable runtime overflow checks and runtime type checks.

Using your code I got these times at different levels of optimization:

[-Onone]

Swift: 6110.98903417587ms
Objc:  134.006023406982ms

[-O]

Swift: 89.8249745368958ms
Objc:  85.5680108070374ms

[-Ofast]

Swift: 77.1470069885254ms
Objc:  76.3399600982666ms

Keep in mind that -Ofast is comes with risks. e.g. It will silently ignore integer and array overflows, producing nonsense results, so if you choose to use it you'll have to guarantee yourself that overflows aren't possible in your program.




回答2:


Credits to @sjeohp for his comment which is basically the answer to the question.

I tried optimizing the code to the most aggressive way in Release for both LLVM and Swift optimizations:

Compiled the project in Release and got:

[1040101022027, 1040101022039, 1040101022057, 1040101022099, 1040101022153] took: 63.211977481842ms
[1040101022027, 1040101022039, 1040101022057, 1040101022099, 1040101022153] took: 60.0320100784302ms

Again, thanks @sjeohp for catching this !



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24162475/is-swift-really-slow-at-dealing-with-numbers

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