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I don't know how to interpret the output from Python's timeit.timeit() function. My code is as follows:

import timeit

setup = """
import pydash
list_of_objs = [
    {},
    {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 0: 0},
    {'a': 1, 'c': 1, 'p': lambda x: x}
]
"""
print(timeit.timeit("pydash.filter_(list_of_objs, {'a': 1})", setup=setup))

The output from this is 11.85382745500101. How do I interpret this number?

1 Answer 1

71

The return value is seconds as a float.

It is the total time taken to run the test (not counting the setup), so the average time per test is that number divided by the number argument, which defaults to 1 million.

See the Time.timeit() documentation:

Time number executions of the main statement. This executes the setup statement once, and then returns the time it takes to execute the main statement a number of times, measured in seconds as a float. The argument is the number of times through the loop, defaulting to one million.

2
  • So this means that it is better to repeat 1e6 times with a number of 1 and take the minimum (implied by the docs)? Mar 19, 2018 at 19:18
  • 2
    @MadPhysicist no. Because then you are enabling and disabling the garbage collector a million times too. Do not set number to 1.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Mar 19, 2018 at 19:23

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