0
StringTemplate insert = new StringTemplate("insert $table$ values($value;separator=\",\"$)");
int testSize = 10000;
for(int i=0;i<testSize;i++) {           
    insert.setAttribute("table", "aTable");
    String[] vs = {"1", "1", "'aaa'", "'bbb'"};
    for(int j = 0;j < vs.length;j++){   
        insert.setAttribute("value", vs[j]);    
    }
    insert.toString();  
    insert.reset(); 
}   

Above would slower than following plain StringBuilder roughly by 5 times....

int testSize = 10000;
StringBuilder sb= new StringBuilder(100);
for(int i=0; i<testSize; i++) {
    sb.append("INSERT ").append("aTable (");
    String[] v = {"1", "1", "'aaa'", "'bbb'"};
    for(int j=0; j<v.length; j++) { 
        if(j > 0) {
        sb.append(",");
        }
        sb.append(v[j]);    
    }
    sb.append(")");
    sb.toString();
}

Any idea or suggestions about how to improve StringTemplate's efficiency? Thanks! StringTemplate seems to invoke toString() on each token, right?

3
  • 1
    You need to describe the question better. Are you expecting us to execute the code, time it, and come up with the data to tell us what your question really is? Instead, tell us what you see from those tests, what you expected, and possibly your hypothesis about the reason for the difference. Apr 28, 2011 at 10:06
  • 1
    For instance, let's start with, which language/runtime is this? What is StringTemplate (since you don't have it in the code at all.) When you say "any idea or suggestions?", then my question is "about what?" Basically... what is your question? Apr 28, 2011 at 10:07
  • @ Lasse V. Karlsen: you're perfectly right.I raise my question more clearly now.
    – rayeaster
    Apr 28, 2011 at 11:51

2 Answers 2

6

I don't think you can draw valid performance conclusions from such a small test; how does it perform in real world usage?

Under the hood StringTemplate has to do a lot more work than just naïvely using a StringBuilder like you have done (it needs to construct abstract syntax trees, walk them, render text, etc), which probably contributes to the overhead. You haven't mentioned anything about what version of StringTemplate you're using; supposedly StringTemplate 4 is much faster than previous versions, partially because it involves direct translation to bytecode.

In general there will be a tradeoff between performance and maintainability, readability, and reuse. If StringTemplate is fast enough for your purposes, I think its benefits far outweigh its problems.

2
  • your comments sounds great!thanks!
    – rayeaster
    Apr 28, 2011 at 15:11
  • 1
    I retry above simple test using ST in StringTemplate4 rather than StringTemplate in anltr. It is mush fast!Thanks!
    – rayeaster
    Apr 29, 2011 at 1:46
1

Use ST in StringTemplate4 rather than StringTemplate in anltr3.3

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