As part of a programming challenge, I need to read, from stdin, a sequence of space-separated integers (on a single line), and print the sum of those integers to stdout. The sequence in question can contain as many as 10,000,000 integers.
I have two solutions for this: one written in Haskell (foo.hs
), and another, equivalent one, written in Python 2 (foo.py
). Unfortunately, the (compiled) Haskell program is consistently slower than the Python program, and I'm at a loss for explaining the discrepancy in performance between the two programs; see the Benchmark section below. If anything, I would have expected Haskell to have the upper hand...
What am I doing wrong? How can I account for this discrepancy? Is there an easy way of speeding up my Haskell code?
(For information, I'm using a mid-2010 Macbook Pro with 8Gb RAM, GHC 7.8.4, and Python 2.7.9.)
foo.hs
main = print . sum =<< getIntList
getIntList :: IO [Int]
getIntList = fmap (map read . words) getLine
(compiled with ghc -O2 foo.hs
)
foo.py
ns = map(int, raw_input().split())
print sum(ns)
Benchmark
In the following, test.txt
consists of a single line of 10 million space-separated integers.
# Haskell
$ time ./foo < test.txt
1679257
real 0m36.704s
user 0m35.932s
sys 0m0.632s
# Python
$ time python foo.py < test.txt
1679257
real 0m7.916s
user 0m7.756s
sys 0m0.151s
read :: String -> Integer
was quadratic at least until a more or less recent patch. Not sure whether the same kind of algorithm was used forInt
...read
is just the wrong tool for the job when your format is simply ints.read
is intended to parse valid haskell expressions, so things like"((( 0x8485) ))"
will parse fine at quite some extra cost.