I've downloaded a Python 3.6 alpha build from the Python Github repository, and one of my favourite new features is literal string formatting. It can be used like so:
>>> x = 2
>>> f"x is {x}"
"x is 2"
This appears to do the same thing as using the format
function on a str
instance. However, one thing that I've noticed is that this literal string formatting is actually very slow compared to just calling format
. Here's what timeit
says about each method:
>>> x = 2
>>> timeit.timeit(lambda: f"X is {x}")
0.8658502227130764
>>> timeit.timeit(lambda: "X is {}".format(x))
0.5500578542015617
If I use a string as timeit
's argument, my results are still showing the pattern:
>>> timeit.timeit('x = 2; f"X is {x}"')
0.5786435347381484
>>> timeit.timeit('x = 2; "X is {}".format(x)')
0.4145195760771685
As you can see, using format
takes almost half the time. I would expect the literal method to be faster because less syntax is involved. What is going on behind the scenes which causes the literal method to be so much slower?
x
is assigned to a local variable when passed to theformat
method, but has to be found in theglobals
by thef"..."
syntax.str.format()
parses the slots at runtime..format
is faster then these strings should simply be compiled into calls to.format
.