If you create 10,000 strings in a loop, a lot of garbage collection has to take place which uses up a lot of resources.
If you do the same thing with symbols, you create objects which cannot be garbage collected.
Which is worse?
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If you create 10,000 strings in a loop, a lot of garbage collection has to take place which uses up a lot of resources. If you do the same thing with symbols, you create objects which cannot be garbage collected. Which is worse?
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Seeing as symbols are almost always created via literals, there isn't much potential for a memory explosion here. Their behavior is pretty much required by their usage: every time you refer to a symbol, it's the same one. Similarly, strings need to be unique in Ruby. This is due to the way they're used - text processing etc. Decide which one to use depending on their semantics, don't optimize prematurely. |
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If you refer to the same symbol in your loop, then it doesn't have to recreate that object everytime i.e.
Now if you use a string there instead, the string will be recreated 10K times. In general, use symbols in cases where you almost treat the literal like a constant or a key. A very good example for me would be
instead of
action being re-used over and over again within your application. |
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