40

Given two string variables $string and $needle in perl, what's the most efficient way to check whether $string starts with $needle.

  • $string =~ /^\Q$needle\E/ is the closest match I could think of that does what is required but is the least efficient (by far) of the solutions I tried.
  • index($string, $needle) == 0 works and is relatively efficient for some values of $string and $needle but needlessly searches for the needle in other positions (if not found at the start).
  • substr($string, 0, length($needle)) eq $needle should be quite simple and efficient, but in most of my few tests is not more efficient than the previous one.

Is there a canonical way to do that in perl which I wouldn't be aware of or any way to optimise any of the above solutions?

(in my particular use case, $string and $needle are going to be different in each run, so precompiling a regexp is not an option).


Example of how to measure the performance of a given solution (here from a POSIX sh):

string='somewhat not so longish string' needle='somew'
time perl -e '
  ($n,$string,$needle) = @ARGV;
  for ($i=0;$i<$n;$i++) {

    index($string, $needle) == 0

  }' 10000000 "$string" "$needle"

With those values, index() performs better than substr()+eq with this system with perl 5.14.2, but with:

string="aaaaabaaaaabaaaaabaaaaabaaaaabaaaaab" needle="aaaaaa"

That's reversed.

5
  • 2
    Different versions of Perl are going to have an effect here and I recommend adding the benchmark code you used for feedback or reuse.
    – Ashley
    Jul 30, 2015 at 13:36
  • @Ashley, good point, updated. Jul 30, 2015 at 14:20
  • Perhaps you will write String::MoreUtils::XS ?
    – pilcrow
    Jul 30, 2015 at 14:53
  • 4
    Have you profiled your script to confirm that this micro optimization is actually needed?
    – Ron Bergin
    Jul 30, 2015 at 15:09
  • 4
    FYI, you should use the Benchmark module any time you want to benchmark something in Perl. /usr/bin/time will not necessarily give you a fair comparison. Jul 30, 2015 at 19:54

2 Answers 2

35
rindex $string, $substring, 0

searches for $substring in $string at position <=0 which is only possible if $substring is a prefix of $string. Example:

> rindex "abc", "a", 0
0
> rindex "abc", "b", 0
-1
1
  • 2
    Perfect thanks. It's the feature I wasn't aware of and was looking for. I get similar timings for both test cases in the question, and it's faster than any of the other approaches on both. Apr 1, 2019 at 12:30
27

How important is this, really? I did a number of benchmarks, and the index method averaged 0.68 microseconds per iteration; the regex method 1.14μs; the substr method 0.16μs. Even my worst-case scenarios (2250-char strings that were equal), index took 2.4μs, regex took 5.7μs, and substr took 0.5μs.

My advice is to write a library routine:

sub begins_with
{
    return substr($_[0], 0, length($_[1])) eq $_[1];
}

and focus your optimization efforts elsewhere.

UPDATE: Based on criticism of my "worst-case" scenario described above, I ran a new set of benchmarks with a 20,000-char randomly-generated string, comparing it against itself and against a string that differed only in the last byte.

For such long strings, the regex solution was by far the worst (a 20,000 character regex is hell): 105μs for the match success, 100μs for the match failure.

The index and substr solutions were still quite fast. index was 11.83μs / 11.86μs for success/failure, and substr was 4.09μs / 4.15μs. Moving the code to a separate function added about 0.222±0.05μs.

Benchmark code available at: http://codepaste.net/2k1y8e

I do not know the characteristics of @Stephane's data, but my advice stands.

12
  • 1
    For earlier perls, you might want to omit the return statement. Jul 30, 2015 at 15:27
  • 2
    NOT useless, @ikegami. Half of my benchmark cases were matches, half were match failures. Jul 30, 2015 at 16:33
  • 2
    @SueD.Nymme: your posted answer is worded in a way that implies your worst-case test was only matching strings. Clearly the worst-case for index is an extremely long haystack that doesn't contain the needle anywhere, so it has to check all the way to the end. I'd agree with your conclusion, though: just use substr, since we've shown that it's not slower in common cases. It should have a much better worst-case, which is important for resisting DOS attacks (or accidental slowdowns). Jul 30, 2015 at 16:52
  • 2
    Instead of simply dismissing my benchmark results, you could try to reproduce them. Jul 30, 2015 at 19:37
  • 2
    "How important is this, really?" Enough for the OP to ask the question and for you to write benchmarks. That opening question serves no purpose other than to ding the OP for asking, and is in conflict with the rest of the answer. The advice to write a library routine is independent of the question, and actually supports the question, since library routines should strive to be efficient. The most efficient implementation is rindex($_[0], $_[1], 0) == 0, and this unusual usage of rindex can be hidden away in the library routine along with a comment explaining it.
    – Jim Balter
    Aug 1, 2019 at 19:59

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