Surprise using the 'is' operator

Terry Reedy tjreedy at udel.edu
Wed Sep 27 13:18:09 EDT 2006


"Georg Brandl" <g.brandl-nospam at gmx.net> wrote in message 
news:efe7v1$8ls$1 at news.albasani.net...
> tobiah wrote:
>> Suppose I fill an list with 100 million random integers in the range
>> of 1 - 65535.  Wouldn't I save much memory if all of the ocurrances
>> of '12345' pointed to the same integer object?  Why should more be made,
>> when they all do the same thing, and are not subject to change?
>
> Because for typical usage of integers (which doesn't include your 
> example),
> it is more expensive to check if there's already an integer with that 
> specific
> value out there than to create a new one.

I am not sure what you are saying.  Every (C) int is checked to see if it 
is in the preallocated range before making a new Python int object.  The 
reason for the low limit is the various time-space tradeoffs applied across 
the entire range of programs.

Terry Jan Reedy






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