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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting On how to select the right tool for a given task Post 302249572 by neked on Tuesday 21st of October 2008 03:42:23 PM
Old 10-21-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by neked
3) Even if you were a parameter substitution guru, and you used meaningful variable names and comments to make clearer what your parameter substitution tricks do, then future maintainers of the code might not be the same. This bit me a couple of days ago: I had to spend 20 minutes debugging a bash script riddled with those parameter substitution scripts. I estimate I would've spent closer to 5 minutes if the code was written using more obvious external tools (sed, basename, awk). This is about 15 minutes of human time wasted in order to save less than a few milliseconds of CPU time. Especially since the whole script runs only once a night, and does not exceed 0.030 seconds runtime on my modest 7 years old computer.
I've just substituted all occurrences of parameter substitutions with equivalent sed and basename commands in the script I refer to above, the execution time went up from an average of 0.030 seconds to 0.061 seconds. That means parameter substitution use shaved an average of 0.03 seconds per run. Considering that I've had to spend roughly 15 more minutes understanding the code to debug it, this means the code has to run 15*60/0.03 times to pay off the extra time I invested to debug it. That's 30,000 times. Considering that it runs once a night, this means we'll have to wait more than 80 years!

Even after 80 years, those 0.020 seconds shaved off CPU time per night are not as worthy to me as 15 minutes of my time which I could've spent aternative activity redacted

Last edited by Perderabo; 10-21-2008 at 05:49 PM.. Reason: clean up language
 

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Duration(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					     Duration(3pm)

NAME
Time::Duration - rounded or exact English expression of durations SYNOPSIS
Example use in a program that ends by noting its runtime: my $start_time = time(); use Time::Duration; # then things that take all that time, and then ends: print "Runtime ", duration(time() - $start_time), ". "; Example use in a program that reports age of a file: use Time::Duration; my $file = 'that_file'; my $age = $^T - (stat($file))[9]; # 9 = modtime print "$file was modified ", ago($age); DESCRIPTION
This module provides functions for expressing durations in rounded or exact terms. In the first example in the Synopsis, using duration($interval_seconds): If the "time() - $start_time" is 3 seconds, this prints "Runtime: 3 seconds.". If it's 0 seconds, it's "Runtime: 0 seconds.". If it's 1 second, it's "Runtime: 1 second.". If it's 125 seconds, you get "Runtime: 2 minutes and 5 seconds.". If it's 3820 seconds (which is exactly 1h, 3m, 40s), you get it rounded to fit within two expressed units: "Runtime: 1 hour and 4 minutes.". Using duration_exact instead would return "Runtime: 1 hour, 3 minutes, and 40 seconds". In the second example in the Synopsis, using ago($interval_seconds): If the $age is 3 seconds, this prints "file was modified 3 seconds ago". If it's 0 seconds, it's "file was modified just now", as a special case. If it's 1 second, it's "from 1 second ago". If it's 125 seconds, you get "file was modified 2 minutes and 5 seconds ago". If it's 3820 seconds (which is exactly 1h, 3m, 40s), you get it rounded to fit within two expressed units: "file was modified 1 hour and 4 minutes ago". Using ago_exact instead would return "file was modified 1 hour, 3 minutes, and 40 seconds ago". And if the file's modtime is, surprisingly, three seconds into the future, $age is -3, and you'll get the equally and appropriately surprising "file was modified 3 seconds from now." FUNCTIONS
This module provides all the following functions, which are all exported by default when you call "use Time::Duration;". duration($seconds) duration($seconds, $precision) Returns English text expressing the approximate time duration of abs($seconds), with at most "$precision || 2" expressed units. (That is, duration($seconds) is the same as duration($seconds,2).) For example, duration(120) or duration(-120) is "2 minutes". And duration(0) is "0 seconds". The precision figure means that no more than that many units will be used in expressing the time duration. For example, 31,629,659 seconds is a duration of exactly 1 year, 1 day, 2 hours, and 59 seconds (assuming 1 year = exactly 365 days, as we do assume in this module). However, if you wanted an approximation of this to at most two expressed (i.e., nonzero) units, it would round it and truncate it to "1 year and 1 day". Max of 3 expressed units would get you "1 year, 1 day, and 2 hours". Max of 4 expressed units would get you "1 year, 1 day, 2 hours, and 59 seconds", which happens to be exactly true. Max of 5 (or more) expressed units would get you the same, since there are only four nonzero units possible in for that duration. duration_exact($seconds) Same as duration($seconds), except that the returned value is an exact (unrounded) expression of $seconds. For example, duration_exact(31629659) returns "1 year, 1 day, 2 hours, and 59 seconds later", which is exactly true. ago($seconds) ago($seconds, $precision) For a positive value of seconds, this prints the same as "duration($seconds, [$precision]) . ' ago'". For example, ago(120) is "2 minutes ago". For a negative value of seconds, this prints the same as "duration($seconds, [$precision]) . ' from now'". For example, ago(-120) is "2 minutes from now". As a special case, ago(0) returns "right now". ago_exact($seconds) Same as ago($seconds), except that the returned value is an exact (unrounded) expression of $seconds. from_now($seconds) from_now($seconds, $precision) from_now_exact($seconds) The same as ago(-$seconds), ago(-$seconds, $precision), ago_exact(-$seconds). For example, from_now(120) is "2 minutes from now". later($seconds) later($seconds, $precision) For a positive value of seconds, this prints the same as "duration($seconds, [$precision]) . ' later'". For example, ago(120) is "2 minutes later". For a negative value of seconds, this prints the same as "duration($seconds, [$precision]) . ' earlier'". For example, later(-120) is "2 minutes earlier". As a special case, later(0) returns "right then". later_exact($seconds) Same as later($seconds), except that the returned value is an exact (unrounded) expression of $seconds. earlier($seconds) earlier($seconds, $precision) earlier_exact($seconds) The same as later(-$seconds), later(-$seconds, $precision), later_exact(-$seconds). For example, earlier(120) is "2 minutes earlier". concise( function( ... ) ) Concise takes the string output of one of the above functions and makes it more concise. For example, "ago(4567)" returns "1 hour and 16 minutes ago", but "concise(ago(4567))" returns "1h16m ago". I18N/L10N NOTES Little of the internals of this module are English-specific. See source and/or contact me if you're interested in making a localized version for some other language than English. BACKSTORY
I wrote the basic "ago()" function for use in Infobot ("http://www.infobot.org"), because I was tired of this sort of response from the Purl Infobot: me> Purl, seen Woozle? <Purl> Woozle was last seen on #perl 20 days, 7 hours, 32 minutes and 40 seconds ago, saying: Wuzzle! I figured if it was 20 days ago, I don't care about the seconds. So once I had written "ago()", I abstracted the code a bit and got all the other functions. CAVEAT
This module calls a durational "year" an interval of exactly 365 days of exactly 24 hours each, with no provision for leap years or monkey business with 23/25 hour days (much less leap seconds!). But since the main work of this module is approximation, that shouldn't be a great problem for most purposes. SEE ALSO
Date::Interval, which is similarly named, but does something rather different. Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994), where the character Data would express time durations like "1 year, 20 days, 22 hours, 59 minutes, and 35 seconds" instead of rounding to "1 year and 21 days". This is because no-one ever told him to use Time::Duration. COPYRIGHT AND DISCLAIMER
Copyright 2006, Sean M. Burke "sburke@cpan.org", all rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. AUTHOR
Current maintainer Avi Finkel, "avi@finkel.org"; Original author Sean M. Burke, "sburke@cpan.org" perl v5.10.1 2007-08-19 Duration(3pm)
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