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@kabutz
Last active October 26, 2016 15:22
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A simple exponential time shootout between C, Java and Swift
/*
Algorithm is exponential - very bad. It is just meant to exercise the CPU a bit and
to see what happens with different languages. Not representative of real code.
Interesting that Java beats C, thanks to HotSpot. I expected Swift to be as fast as C
at least. I also expected the compiled Swift to be faster than when run as a script.
A bit disappointed, but more time needed to see where the bottlenecks are. Plus I
need to run some real code for benchmarking.
Update: swiftc -O improved the speed quite a bit to be about the same speed as Java
Disclaimer: Whilst I know Java pretty well, the last time I wrote a C program was
probably in 1992. I couldn't even remember how to printf() a long! And I also
don't know Swift very well yet. I'm hoping that someone can show me what I'm doing
wrong that the compiled Swift code runs slower than swift < fib.swift.
Disclaimer2: Yes, I know we should run the code several times to get an average speed, etc. :-)
Times on my machine MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Late 2013), 2.6 GHz Intel Core i7
Java - user 0m7.981s
Swift 3.0 compiled with -O - user 0m8.303s
C with -O - user 0m10.437s
C - user 0m12.649s
Swift 3.0 uncompiled - user 0m14.170s
Swift 3.0 compiled - user 0m22.140s
*/
/* Java */
public class Fib {
public static void main(String... args) {
for(int n=10; n <= 44; n++) {
System.out.printf("fib(%d)=%d%n", n, fib(n));
}
}
public static long fib(int n) {
if (n < 2) return n;
return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2);
}
}
/* C */
#include<stdio.h>
unsigned long fib(int n) {
if (n < 2) return n;
return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2);
}
int main() {
for(int n=10; n <= 44; n++) {
printf("fib(%d)=%lu\n", n, fib(n));
}
}
/* Swift 3.0 */
func fib(_ n : Int) -> Int {
if n < 2 {
return n
} else {
return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2)
}
}
for n in 10...44 {
print("fib(\(n))=\(fib(n))")
}
@expobrain
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Here the Rust version:

fn fib(n: u64) -> u64 {
  match n < 2 {
      true => n,
      false => fib(n-1) + fib(n-2)
  }
}

fn main() {
  for n in 10..44 {
    println!("fib({})={}", n, fib(n));
  }
}

On my machine MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Early 2015), 3.1 GHz Intel Core i7 it takes 0m6.980s compiled in release mode with rustc 1.12.

In comparison, the same C code compiled with gcc -O takes 0m11.987s.

@tvogler
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tvogler commented Oct 12, 2016

Boys use toys, real men use Mathematica:

Clear["Global`fib"];
fib[n_] := fib[n] = If[n < 2, n, fib[n - 1] + fib[n - 2]];
Timing[Table[{n, fib[n]}, {n, 1, 44}]]

Takes about 0.3 mSec. With 5 mSec you can compute fibonaccis up to 1000. The C Code above takes about 11.132 Seconds. Ran on a MacBook Pro (Retina, Mid 2012), 2,7 GHz Intel Core i7

@tvogler
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tvogler commented Oct 12, 2016

And I took the extra burden computing fib[1]...fib[9]!

@tvogler
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tvogler commented Oct 12, 2016

Any volunteers for an APL version, which usually runs an order of magnitude faster?

@tvogler
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tvogler commented Oct 12, 2016

And if you have a few mSecs to spend, impress your boss with:

Clear["Global`fib"];
phi := (1 + Sqrt[5])/2;
fib[n_] := fib[n] = Simplify[(phi^n - (1 - phi)^n) /Sqrt[5]];
Timing[Table[{n, fib[n]}, {n, 1, 44}]]

@dahankzter
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but gcc -O3 makes the C version 25% faster than the Java version on my machine. Linux with everything updated Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3960X CPU @ 3.30GHz.

-O3 seems fair since you allow hotspot to do all sorts of magic... ;)

@oluwasayo
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What if the Java test uses boxed types (to take it closer to Swift)?

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ghost commented Oct 26, 2016

What if you ran the Java one using -server?

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