I am confused whether or not it is advisable to use x += 1
or x = x+1
. I know that they both produce the same results. In practical terms, are there any performance gain when using x+=1
instead of x = x+1
? Will it make my program run faster?
2 Answers
x += 1
is just syntactical short cut for x = x + 1
. AFAIK, No machine (CPU) level instruction set has an instruction to do x += 1
in a single atomic operation. The actual code executed by the CPU should be identical.
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3
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The x86 INC instruction s not atomic. If you run
INC DWORD PTR [ EAX ]
the low-level decomposition though would look more like:uOp.load tmp_reg, [ EAX ]
uOp.inc tmp_reg
uOp.store [ EAX ], tmp_reg
and therefore is not executed atomically. Clearly, just from common sense, reading the current value, and adding 1 to it are two separate processes. Jul 3, 2013 at 18:01
Any good compiler should give you the same machine code for both expressions.
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4eventually, yes, they all are. No CPU can execute anything except code that matches its internal instruction set. Perhaps sometimes the intermediary machine language version may be skipped, but eventally it has to be in converted into (what should I call it? assembly?) - something that matches, one for one to the CPUs instruction set. Jul 3, 2013 at 17:53
x=x+1
can be a bottleneck ifx
is a string :-)