28

I have a Delphi 2009 program that handles a lot of data and needs to be as fast as possible and not use too much memory.

What small simple changes have you made to your Delphi code that had the biggest impact on the performance of your program by noticeably reducing execution time or memory use?


Thanks everyone for all your answers. Many great tips.

For completeness, I'll post a few important articles on Delphi optimization that I found.

Before you start optimizing Delphi code at About.com

Speed and Size: Top 10 Tricks also at About.com

Code Optimization Fundamentals and Delphi Optimization Guidelines at High Performance Delphi, relating to Delphi 7 but still very pertinent.

6
  • You have to provide specific issue so we can try to answer. Dec 17, 2008 at 2:10
  • Very general, be more spesific.
    – Serguzest
    Dec 17, 2008 at 2:13
  • I'm looking for anything that can help. The first 3 answers are excellent and already have given me new ideas. Be creative and just think what helped you the most.
    – lkessler
    Dec 17, 2008 at 2:15
  • Remember,Donald Knuth's "Premature optimization is the root of all evil (or at least most of it) in programming."
    – Gerry Coll
    Dec 17, 2008 at 3:12
  • Yes, but: "conversely, when designing software at a system level, performance issues should always be considered from the beginning". See: acm.org/ubiquity/views/v7i24_fallacy.html
    – lkessler
    Dec 17, 2008 at 3:33

35 Answers 35

30

.BeginUpdate;

.EndUpdate;

;)

5
  • Mostly when updating GUI controls. ListView.Items.BeginUpdate; ... ListView.Items.EndUpdate; Dec 17, 2008 at 7:55
  • +1 - it's surprising what a difference this can make when you're adding lots of things to listviews, memos etc.
    – robsoft
    Dec 17, 2008 at 9:42
  • Can also help when building up SQL using qry.SQL.Add. Have a look at what happens from the TStringList.OnChange if an ADO query has the connection assigned - there can be round trips to the OLEDB layer
    – Gerry Coll
    Dec 22, 2008 at 22:39
  • BeginUpdate and endupdate won't help anymore if you've got thousands of items. Your application will hang for seconds or minutes, unless you use the TListview or TListbox in virtual mode. That's when you'll really notice a performance boost. Aug 11, 2010 at 14:41
  • Would anyone be able to edit this answer to explain a little better what .BeginUpdate and .EndUpdate are used for or when it should be used? I'm not familiar with this feature (yet), but it sounds useful. Nov 23, 2014 at 19:03
22

Use a Delphi Profiling tool (Some here or here) and discover your own bottle necks. Optimizing the wrong bottlenecks is a waste of time. In other words, if you apply all of these suggestions here, but ignore the fact someone put a sleep(1000) (or similar) in some very important code is a waste of your time. Fix your actual bottlenecks first.

5
  • Yeah, this is the best solution on here so far. And the best profiler I've seen is AQTime. They're offering an old version as a free download. It's not the latest, but it still works very well. download.com/AQtime/3000-18487_4-50535.html Dec 17, 2008 at 21:49
  • AQtime may not be the best for everyone. See: stackoverflow.com/questions/368938/delphi-profiling-tools - but thanks for the link to the free version. I'll have to see if it works with Delphi 2009.
    – lkessler
    Dec 17, 2008 at 22:10
  • It does. I've already tested it. Dec 17, 2008 at 23:21
  • @Mason: It's not a free download. The old download now redirects to a trial version for 6.11. Dec 18, 2008 at 18:15
  • +1. Changing working code for optimization's sake without profiling is crazy. Jan 28, 2010 at 9:45
21

Stop using TStringList for everything.

TStringList is not a general purpose datastructure for effective storage and handling of everything from simple to complex types. Look for alternatives. I use Delphi Container and Algorithm Library (DeCAL, formerly known as SDL). Julians EZDSL should also be a good alternative.

20

Pre-allocating lists and arrays, rather than growing them with each iteration.

This has probably had the biggest impact for me in terms of speed.

12

If you need to use Application.processmesssages (or similar) in a loop, try calling it only every Nth iteration.

Similarly, if updating a progressbar, don't update it every iteration. Instead, increment it by x units every x iterations, or scale the updates according to time or as a percentage of overall task length.

9
  1. FastMM
  2. FastCode (lib)
  3. Use high performance data structures, like hash table (etc). Many places it is faster to make one loop which makes lookup hash table for your data. Uses quite lot of memory but it surely is fast. (this maybe is most important one, but 2 first are dead simple and need very little of effort to do)
1
  • Re 3.: Don't change anything without correctly measuring the effect it has. Using memory intensive data structures may actually slow things down, if memory access patterns does continually invalidate cache lines.
    – mghie
    Dec 17, 2008 at 12:02
8

Reduce disk operations. If there's enough memory, load the file entirely to RAM and do all operations in memory.

2
  • 1
    +1 on that. Also, even if you have the whole file in memory, process it in a way (sequentially) that cache contents are preserved as much as possible. Applies for data sizes >> processor cache size, naturally.
    – mghie
    Dec 17, 2008 at 11:59
  • 1
    Map the file into memory. Let the memory manager handle reading pages in and swapping unneeded pages out.
    – Ian Boyd
    Aug 12, 2011 at 23:35
7

Consider the careful use of threads. If you are not using threads now, then consider adding a couple. If you are, make sure you are not using too many. If you are running on a Dual or Quad core computer (which most are any more) then proper thread tuning is very important.

You could look at OmniThread Library by Gabr, but there are a number of thread libraries in development for Delphi. You could easily implement your own parallel for using anonymous types.

1
7

Before you do anything, identify slow parts. Do not touch working code which performs fast enough.

6

The biggest improvement came when I started using AsyncCalls to convert single-threaded applications that used to freeze up the UI, into (sort of) multi-threaded apps.

Although AsyncCalls can do a lot more, I've found it useful for this very simple purpose. Let's say you have a subroutine blocked like this: Disable Button, Do Work, Enable Button. You move the 'Do Work' part to a local function (call it AsyncDoWork), and add four lines of code:

var  a: IAsyncCall;    
a := LocalAsyncCall(@AsyncDoWork);  
while (NOT a.Finished) do 
  application.ProcessMessages;  
a.Sync;

What this does for you is run AsyncDoWork in a separate thread, while your main thread remains available to respond to the UI (like dragging the window or clicking Abort.) When AsyncDoWork is finished the code continues. Because I moved it to a local function, all local vars are available, an the code does not need to be changed.

This is a very limited type of 'multi-threading'. Specifically, it's dual threading. You must ensure that your Async function and the UI do not both access the same VCL components or data structures. (I disable all controls except the stop button.)

I don't use this to write new programs. It's just a really quick & easy way to make old programs more responsive.

3
  • Although this question doesn't really have an answer, I'm giving you the "accepted answer" because it, more than any other, is one that look like a very simple solution to many problesm and yet I hadn't heard of before. I know about threads and was cringing at getting into them. But if AsyncCalls are this simple (yes, I know about keeping them hands off the other data), then it is something that should be kept in mind by Delphi programmers. Mghie did mention this earlier, but your description is excellent.
    – lkessler
    Nov 8, 2009 at 22:27
  • 1
    Oh god, polling and introduces re-entrancy bug.
    – Ian Boyd
    Aug 12, 2011 at 23:31
  • No need for polling. This line does the same thing better: MsgAsyncMultiSync([AsyncInterface], False, SleepTime, QS_ALLINPUT or QS_ALLPOSTMESSAGE);
    – Guy Gordon
    Aug 13, 2011 at 16:44
5

When working with a tstringlist (or similar), set "sorted := false" until needed (if at all). Seems like a no-brainer...

5
  1. Create unit tests
  2. Verify tests all pass
  3. Profile your application
  4. Refactor looking for bottlenecks and memory
  5. Repeat from Step 2 (comparing to previous pass)
5

Make intelligent use of SetLength() for strings and arrays. Optimise initialisation with FillChar or ZeroMemory.

Local variables created on stack (e.g. record types) are faster than heap allocated (objects and New()) variables.

Reuse objects rather than Destroy then create. But make sure management code for this is faster than memory manager!

3
  • FastMM is fast, so your management code for object reuse needs to be really fast. This is definitely something you want to profile, but it can make a huge difference when done right. Dec 17, 2008 at 6:06
  • More to consider about caching objects vs. recreating them: stackoverflow.com/questions/257428 Dec 18, 2008 at 9:03
  • Hence "But make sure management code for this is faster than memory manager!" - OK if it is something that can be cleared using FillChar, or using simple assignment (use an "Initialise(params)" method rather than "Create(Params)". Otherwise probably not worth it.
    – Gerry Coll
    Dec 22, 2008 at 22:33
4

Check heavily-used loops for calculations that could be (at least partially) pre-calculated or handled with a lookup table. Trig functions are a classic for this, but it applies to many others.

4

If you have a list, use a dynamic array of anything, even a record as follows:

This needs no classes, no freeing and access to it is very fast. Even if it needs to grow you can do this - see below. Only use TList or TStringList if you need lots of size changing flexibility.

type
  TMyRec = record
    SomeString : string;
    SomeValue : double;
  end;

var
  Data : array of TMyRec;
  I : integer;

..begin
  SetLength( Data, 100 ); // defines the length and CLEARS ALL DATA
  Data[32].SomeString := 'Hello';
  ShowMessage( Data[32] );

  // Grow the list by 1 item.
  I := Length( Data );
  SetLength( Data, I+1 );

..end;
3

Separating the program logic from user interface, refactoring, then optimizing the most-used, most resource-intensive elements independently.

2
  • Turn debugging OFF

  • Turn optimizations ON

  • Remove all references to units that you don't actually use

  • Look for memory leaks

1
  • 2
    > Turn debugging OFF This has no effect on code size or code speed. The debug information is kept in the dcu and dcp files but is not added to the executable. Dec 17, 2008 at 11:34
2

Use a lot of assertions to debug, then turn them off in shipping code.

2

Turn off range and overflow checking after you have tested extensively.

2

If you really, really, really need to be light weight then you can shed the VCL. Take a look at the KOL & MCK. Granted if you do that then you are trading features for reduced footprint.

2

Use the full FastMM and study the documentation and source and see if you can tweak it to your specifications.

2

For an old BDE development when I first started Delphi, I was using lots of TQuery components. Someone told me to use TTable master-detail after I explained him what I was doing, and that made the program run much faster.

Calling DisableControls can omit unnecessary UI updates.

2

When identifying records, use integers if at all possible for record comparison. While a primary key of "company name" might seem logical, the time spent generating and storing a hash of this will greatly improve overall search times.

1

You might consider using runtime packages. This could reduce your memory foot print if there are more then one program running that is written using the same packages.

1

If you use threads, set their processor affinity. If you don't use threads yet, consider using them, or look into asynchronous I/O (completion ports) if your application does lots of I/O.

1

Consider if a DBMS database is really the perfect choice. If you are only reading data and never changing it, then a flat fixed record file could work faster, especially if the path to the data can be easily mapped (ie, one index). A trivial binary search on a fixed record file is still extremely fast.

1
  • BeginUpdate ... EndUpdate
  • ShortString vs. String
  • Use arrays instead of TStrings and TList

But the sad answer is that tuning and optimization will give you maybe 10% improvement (and it's dangerous); re-design can give you 90%. Once you really understand the goal, you often can restate the problem (and therefore the solution) in much better terms.

Cheers

1
  • Sorry, but that's a terrible 'rule of thumb'. The real truth is, you can't know how much you'll gain by tuning and optimization until you profile. Then you can see if tuning or redesign is appropriate. And if it's dangerous, you're doing it wrong. Test, Refactor, Test.
    – Guy Gordon
    Aug 13, 2011 at 16:39
1

Examine all loops, and look for ways to short circuit. If your looking for something specific and find it in a loop, then use the BREAK command to immediately bail...no sense looping thru the rest. If you know that you don't have a match, then use a CONTINUE as quickly as possible.

0

Take advantage of some of the FastCode project code. Parts of it were incorporated into VCL/RTL proper (like FastMM was), but there is more out there you can use!

Note, they have a new site they are moving too, but it seems to be a bit inactive.

0

Consider hardware issues. If you really need performance then consider the type of hard drive(s) your program and your databases are running on. There are a lot of variables especially if you are running a database. RAID is not always the best answer either.

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