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1 point by i4cu 2160 days ago | link | parent

> "being more memory efficient"

It's only more memory efficient than its previous incarnation.

It's an interesting implementation though. The use of sparse arrays to index the entries is compelling. Measuring this kind of stuff can be non-trivial though as you also have to account for gc (and/or compaction) at different times within your application. There are always trade-offs.

Personally I haven't compared the various implementations (clojure vs. racket vs. python) such that I can give you any real insight. I know clojure's (or rather java's) array-maps are costly when performing iterative lookups within large data sets because I've benchmarked it.

The best bet is to see how an implementation works for your app with your data.



1 point by kinnard 2159 days ago | link

> "The microbenchmarks that we did show large improvements on large and very large dictionaries (particularly, building dictionaries of at least a couple 100s of items is now twice faster) and break-even on small ones (between 20% slower and 20% faster depending very much on the usage patterns and sizes of dictionaries)."

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2 points by i4cu 2159 days ago | link

relative to... its previous incarnation.

Microbenchmarks against a previous version only means they've made a relative improvement.

The benchmarks that would matter to us (or at least me) are:

1. how does it compare to an equivalent implementation without having to maintain insertion order.

2. how does it hold up under stress (larger data sets, with heavy load where gc/compaction have to occur)

Obviously none of this should matter to you as you've said your data load is low with no growth. So bobs your uncle.

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