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Kirill Smelkov
cpython
Commits
09f4f711
Commit
09f4f711
authored
Aug 15, 2016
by
Steven D'Aprano
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Issue6422 add autorange method to timeit.Timer
parent
9171a8b4
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3
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3 changed files
with
69 additions
and
13 deletions
+69
-13
Doc/library/timeit.rst
Doc/library/timeit.rst
+17
-2
Lib/test/test_timeit.py
Lib/test/test_timeit.py
+22
-0
Lib/timeit.py
Lib/timeit.py
+30
-11
No files found.
Doc/library/timeit.rst
View file @
09f4f711
...
...
@@ -100,8 +100,8 @@ The module defines three convenience functions and a public class:
can be controlled by passing a namespace to *globals*.
To measure the execution time of the first statement, use the :meth:`.timeit`
method. The :meth:`.repeat`
method is a convenience to call :meth:`.timeit`
m
ultiple times and return a list of result
s.
method. The :meth:`.repeat`
and :meth:`.autorange` methods are convenience
m
ethods to call :meth:`.timeit` multiple time
s.
The execution time of *setup* is excluded from the overall timed execution run.
...
...
@@ -134,6 +134,21 @@ The module defines three convenience functions and a public class:
timeit.Timer('for i in range(10): oct(i)', 'gc.enable()').timeit()
.. method:: Timer.autorange(callback=None)
Automatically determine how many times to call :meth:`.timeit`.
This is a convenience function that calls :meth:`.timeit` repeatedly
so that the total time >= 0.2 second, returning the eventual
(number of loops, time taken for that number of loops). It calls
:meth:`.timeit` with *number* set to successive powers of ten (10,
100, 1000, ...) up to a maximum of one billion, until the time taken
is at least 0.2 second, or the maximum is reached.
If *callback* is given and is not *None*, it will be called after
each trial with two arguments: ``callback(number, time_taken)``.
.. method:: Timer.repeat(repeat=3, number=1000000)
Call :meth:`.timeit` a few times.
...
...
Lib/test/test_timeit.py
View file @
09f4f711
...
...
@@ -354,6 +354,28 @@ class TestTimeit(unittest.TestCase):
s
=
self
.
run_main
(
switches
=
[
'-n1'
,
'1/0'
])
self
.
assert_exc_string
(
error_stringio
.
getvalue
(),
'ZeroDivisionError'
)
def
autorange
(
self
,
callback
=
None
):
timer
=
FakeTimer
(
seconds_per_increment
=
0.001
)
t
=
timeit
.
Timer
(
stmt
=
self
.
fake_stmt
,
setup
=
self
.
fake_setup
,
timer
=
timer
)
return
t
.
autorange
(
callback
)
def
test_autorange
(
self
):
num_loops
,
time_taken
=
self
.
autorange
()
self
.
assertEqual
(
num_loops
,
1000
)
self
.
assertEqual
(
time_taken
,
1.0
)
def
test_autorange_with_callback
(
self
):
def
callback
(
a
,
b
):
print
(
"{} {:.3f}"
.
format
(
a
,
b
))
with
captured_stdout
()
as
s
:
num_loops
,
time_taken
=
self
.
autorange
(
callback
)
self
.
assertEqual
(
num_loops
,
1000
)
self
.
assertEqual
(
time_taken
,
1.0
)
expected
=
(
'10 0.010
\
n
'
'100 0.100
\
n
'
'1000 1.000
\
n
'
)
self
.
assertEqual
(
s
.
getvalue
(),
expected
)
if
__name__
==
'__main__'
:
unittest
.
main
()
Lib/timeit.py
View file @
09f4f711
...
...
@@ -207,6 +207,26 @@ class Timer:
r
.
append
(
t
)
return
r
def
autorange
(
self
,
callback
=
None
):
"""Return the number of loops so that total time >= 0.2.
Calls the timeit method with *number* set to successive powers of
ten (10, 100, 1000, ...) up to a maximum of one billion, until
the time taken is at least 0.2 second, or the maximum is reached.
Returns ``(number, time_taken)``.
If *callback* is given and is not None, it will be called after
each trial with two arguments: ``callback(number, time_taken)``.
"""
for
i
in
range
(
1
,
10
):
number
=
10
**
i
time_taken
=
self
.
timeit
(
number
)
if
callback
:
callback
(
number
,
time_taken
)
if
time_taken
>=
0.2
:
break
return
(
number
,
time_taken
)
def
timeit
(
stmt
=
"pass"
,
setup
=
"pass"
,
timer
=
default_timer
,
number
=
default_number
,
globals
=
None
):
"""Convenience function to create Timer object and call timeit method."""
...
...
@@ -295,17 +315,16 @@ def main(args=None, *, _wrap_timer=None):
t
=
Timer
(
stmt
,
setup
,
timer
)
if
number
==
0
:
# determine number so that 0.2 <= total time < 2.0
for
i
in
range
(
1
,
10
):
number
=
10
**
i
try
:
x
=
t
.
timeit
(
number
)
except
:
t
.
print_exc
()
return
1
if
verbose
:
print
(
"%d loops -> %.*g secs"
%
(
number
,
precision
,
x
))
if
x
>=
0.2
:
break
callback
=
None
if
verbose
:
def
callback
(
number
,
time_taken
):
msg
=
"{num} loops -> {secs:.{prec}g} secs"
print
(
msg
.
format
(
num
=
number
,
secs
=
time_taken
,
prec
=
precision
))
try
:
number
,
_
=
t
.
autorange
(
callback
)
except
:
t
.
print_exc
()
return
1
try
:
r
=
t
.
repeat
(
repeat
,
number
)
except
:
...
...
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