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What will work faster? How strongly will it affect productivity?

$test = new Test();
$a1 = array();
$a2 = array();
$a3 = array();

$a1[1] = $test;
$a2['qwe'] = $test;
$a3[] = $test;
5
  • i really don't understand your question, but i don't think there's a (noticable) performance difference … where should it be???
    – knittl
    Jun 18, 2010 at 8:55
  • 9
    sigh Write code that is the most understandable, works, and does what you want. If you are worried about performance, profile. Then decide how to "optimize". These "micro optimizations" are most always just a waste of time.
    – user166390
    Jun 18, 2010 at 8:56
  • 2
    Exactly. you can optimize later on, by using caches etc. The speed gain will be trivial, and understandability of the code affects how fast you can adapt it later so is more important. Jun 18, 2010 at 9:00
  • I've turned the syntax around to the usual English word order. Jun 18, 2010 at 15:47
  • 2
    If you really want to measure the [programmer] productivity of this, picking any one at random will surely beat loosing a day or so spent on SO debating this...
    – Wim
    Jun 18, 2010 at 15:56

1 Answer 1

4

As no one answered, I've made some test

The code:

<?php

class O
{
}

$test = new O;
$a1 = array();
$a2 = array();
$a3 = array();

$start = microtime(true);
for ($k = 0; $k < 1000000; $k++)
    $a1[1] = $test;
$time[1] = microtime(true)-$start;

$start = microtime(true);
for ($k = 0; $k < 1000000; $k++)
    $a2['qwe'] = $test;
$time[2] = microtime(true)-$start;

$start = microtime(true);
for ($k = 0; $k < 1000000; $k++)
    $a3[] = $test;
$time[3] = microtime(true)-$start;


print_r($time);

The results:

Array ( [1] => 0.18384599685669 [2] => 0.19556093215942 [3] => 0.3099570274353 )

Third one is the slowest one, but mostly because it actually allocates million objects and first two overwrite object on each pass. When I modified first to $a1[$k] = $test;, the results were similar (although don't run it on a low memory limit, say below 128MB).

The conclusion: as we said before, it doesn't really matter. Focus on writing code which is readable and utilizes design patterns, not on some minor optimizations.

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  • 1
    Pay attention, I assigned a MILLION objects (though small) on each test, and it took so little time. Jun 18, 2010 at 9:13
  • 1
    It actually depend on the number of iterations. One solution could be really faster on a $k < 100 for instance (I used to make optimizations once). Jun 18, 2010 at 9:16
  • 1
    Yeah, but looking at the overall time of this operation... In 99.99% cases it doesn't really matter. Jun 18, 2010 at 9:24
  • and in the other 0.01%, it really doesn't matter
    – Wim
    Jun 18, 2010 at 16:01

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