Benchmarks are always limited, I know. But this might indicate some 
direction:

https://benchmarksgame-team.pages.debian.net/benchmarksgame/faster/go-gpp.html

Am Mittwoch, 6. März 2019 14:07:03 UTC+1 schrieb JuciÊ Andrade:
>
> That doesn't surprises me at all.
>
> A couple years ago I worked for a company where I created prototypes in Go 
> and production code in C++, using the same architecture and algorithms. Go 
> version usually ran 15% faster. After some work both versions could be 
> tuned to run faster, but it amazed me to find that just plain Go code was 
> faster than the corresponding C++ code.
>
> On Thursday, February 28, 2019 at 2:05:55 PM UTC-3, Isaac Gouy wrote:
>>
>> "We reimplemented elPrep in all three languages and benchmarked their 
>> runtime performance and memory use. Results: *The Go implementation 
>> performs best*, yielding the best balance between runtime performance 
>> and memory use. While the Java benchmarks report a somewhat faster runtime 
>> than the Go benchmarks, the memory use of the Java runs is significantly 
>> higher."
>>
>> proggit discussion 
>> <https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/avsfc6/performance_comparison_of_go_c_and_java_for/>
>>
>> article <https://doi.org/10.1101/558056>
>>
>>
>>

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