I have been working on some code. My usual approach is to first solve all of the pieces of the problem, creating the loops and other pieces of code I need as I work through the problem and then if I expect to reuse the code I go back through it and group the parts of code together that I think should be grouped to create functions.
I have just noticed that creating functions and calling them seems to be much more efficient than writing lines of code and deleting containers as I am finished with them.
for example:
def someFunction(aList):
do things to aList
that create a dictionary
return aDict
seems to release more memory at the end than
>>do things to alist
>>that create a dictionary
>>del(aList)
Is this expected behavior?
EDIT added example code
When this function finishes running the PF Usage shows an increase of about 100 mb the filingsList has about 8 million lines.
def getAllCIKS(filingList):
cikDICT=defaultdict(int)
for filing in filingList:
if filing.startswith('.'):
del(filing)
continue
cik=filing.split('^')[0].strip()
cikDICT[cik]+=1
del(filing)
ciklist=cikDICT.keys()
ciklist.sort()
return ciklist
allCIKS=getAllCIKS(open(r'c:\filinglist.txt').readlines())
If I run this instead I show an increase of almost 400 mb
cikDICT=defaultdict(int)
for filing in open(r'c:\filinglist.txt').readlines():
if filing.startswith('.'):
del(filing)
continue
cik=filing.split('^')[0].strip()
cikDICT[cik]+=1
del(filing)
ciklist=cikDICT.keys()
ciklist.sort()
del(cikDICT)