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.NET is heavily optimized to allow the non-exceptional case to run as fast as possible, at the expense of exception performance.

Comparing IronPython to CPython

The only two tests that really stand out as showing a deep performance issue are the two exception handling ones. These are the only tests where either implementation is more than 4x faster than the other. IronPython is 10x faster on the try/catch without an exception and CPython is 30x faster when an exception is actually raised. This is a deliberate design decision within .NET to make code that doesn't throw exceptions run faster - even if that means slowing down code that does throw exceptions. I'm fairly confident this was the right decision - and even remember the day long ago when Guido was discussing Python's exception system and explained that he'd accept almost any slow-down to the exceptional case in return for removing a single instruction from the non-exceptional path.

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.NET is heavily optimized to allow the non-exceptional case to run as fast as possible, at the expense of exception performance.

Comparing IronPython to CPython

The only two tests that really stand out as showing a deep performance issue are the two exception handling ones. These are the only tests where either implementation is more than 4x faster than the other. IronPython is 10x faster on the try/catch without an exception and CPython is 30x faster when an exception is actually raised. This is a deliberate design decision within .NET to make code that doesn't throw exceptions run faster - even if that means slowing down code that does throw exceptions. I'm fairly confident this was the right decision - and even remember the day long ago when Guido was discussing Python's exception system and explained that he'd accept almost any slow-down to the exceptional case in return for removing a single instruction from the non-exceptional path.