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Possible Duplicate:
Is the conditional operator slow?

I'm a massive user of the ? operator in C#. However my project manager frequently warns me that using ? operator might cost some performance compared to the If-Else statements in a large scale application. So I'm told to avoid using it. However, I love using it because it is concise and sort of keeps the code clean.

Is there such performance overhead when using ? operator?

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  • 1
    You can get good answers here...in this stackoverflow.com/questions/3312786/… Jul 25, 2012 at 5:15
  • Please, consider reading this thread too: stackoverflow.com/questions/2259741/…. IMHO, your manager is equivocated Jul 25, 2012 at 5:16
  • 3
    May this link help you. embeddedgurus.com/stack-overflow/2009/02/…
    – SMK
    Jul 25, 2012 at 5:22
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    Taking care about difference in performance of these two concepts in C#, where between the code and machine lie several layers, seems silly to me. Jul 25, 2012 at 5:37
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    Neither the if/else, ternary, nor logical short circuits were designed specifically with the intent of outperforming the others. They were designed to facilitate code clarity. Use them for that. If there's a situation where performance is at issue (after profiling), then start looking at better algorithms before worrying about the microscopic differences between how the compiler interprets various branching mechanisms.
    – DavidO
    Jul 25, 2012 at 5:41

5 Answers 5

126

I ran 100 million Ternary Operators and 100 million If-Else statements and recorded the performance of each. Here is the code:

Stopwatch s = new Stopwatch();
// System.Diagnostics Stopwatch
int test = 0;
s.Start();
for(int a = 0; a < 100000000; a++)
    test = a % 50 == 0 ? 1 : 2;
s.Stop();

s.Restart();
for(int b = 0; b < 100000000; b++)
{
    if(b % 50 == 0)
        test = 1;
    else
        test = 2; 
}
s.Stop();

Here is the results (ran on an Intel Atom 1.66ghz with 1gb ram and I know, it sucks):

  • Ternary Operator: 5986 milliseconds or 0.00000005986 seconds per each operator.

  • If-Else: 5667 milliseconds or 0.00000005667 seconds per each statement.

Don't forget that I ran 100 million of them, and I don't think 0.00000000319 seconds difference between the two matters that much.

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  • 38
    +1 for those statistics. Jul 25, 2012 at 5:46
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    I love that you actually did this! Aug 15, 2017 at 18:27
  • 3
    I couldn't help but smile at this answer!
    – Kush
    Oct 22, 2018 at 20:43
  • 2
    I have the complete opposite result. The ternary operator works 2.6 times faster. I tested the same code. My results are: 185ms with ternary and 495ms with if-else statement
    – Nika
    Jul 9, 2022 at 10:37
  • When you test for such small operators, than don't add in the for-loop itself to the time measurement. Also: using the % operator and also add in this in the time is not a good idea, since divisions are typically very slow operators.
    – Horitsu
    Jun 26, 2023 at 5:11
25

No.

Use what makes your code readable. If if statements do that, use them. If ternary operators do that, use them.

It is likely that both will compile down to the same IL anyway.

In any event the things that will slow down your application will likely be the database or the network or the hard drive ... anything except whether you used if statements or ternary expressions.

19

There's no reason to expect any difference in performance.

In my opinion, the ternary operator should only be used if all three operands are very concise and easy to read. Otherwise I think it has the potential to make code harder to read.

I think a lot of people mis-use this operator by jamming too much logic into one long line of code. I personally won't use it unless the whole line is less than about 80 characters.

Good:

return isFunky ? funkyValue : null;

Bad:

return (thisThing == thatThing && (anotherThing != null || ! IsThisTrue())) ? someThing.GetThis().GetThat() : yetAnotherThing.GetBlah().GetFoo();

I've seen people do a lot worse than the above. I think they should loose their ternary privileges!

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    The "bad" exemple wouldn't so bad if you actualy if you write it on 3 different lines. one for the condition, the second line starting with "?" and the lat line starting with ":" and ending with ";"
    – Maxter
    Jun 7, 2019 at 14:50
9

It is very hard to read ternary operations. If you use nested conditions, understanding ternary will become a overhead. Try to avoid ternary if there are more number of conditions.

3

From my personal point of view, i don't see any performance differences between ternary operator and if statement.Many programming languages supports it and tenary operator is more developer friendly where as conventional If-else operator is understandable in general way.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%3F%3a

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