Greetings all, I have one last feature request that I'd like added to datetime for Python 3.8, and this one I think could use some more discussion, the addition of a "time zone index cache" to the /datetime/ object. The rationale is laid out in detail in bpo-35723 <https://bugs.python.org/issue35723>. The general problem is that currently, /every/ invocation of utcoffset, tzname and dst needs to do full, independent calculations of the time zone offsets, even for time zones where the mapping is guaranteed to be stable because datetimes are immutable. I have a proof of concept implementation: PR #11529 <https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/11529/>.
I'm envisioning that the `datetime` class will add a private `_tzidx` single-byte member (it seems that this does not increase the size of the datetime object, because it's just using an unused alignment byte). `datetime` will also add a `tzidx()` method, which will return `_tzidx` if it's been set and otherwise it will call `self.tzinfo.tzidx()`. If `self.tzinfo.tzidx()` returns a number between 0 and 254 (inclusive), it sets `_tzidx` to this value. tzidx() then returns whatever self.tzinfo.tzidx() returned. The value of this is that as far as I can tell, nearly all non-trivial tzinfo implementations construct a list of possible offsets, and implement utcoffset(), tzname() and dst() by calculating an index into that list and returning it. There are almost always less than 255 distinct offsets. By adding this cache /on the datetime/, we're using a small amount of currently-unused memory to prevent unnecessary calculations about a given datetime. The feature is entirely opt-in, and has no downsides if it goes unused, and it makes it possible to write tzinfo implementations that are both lazy and as fast as the "eager calculation" mode that pytz uses (and that causes many problems for pytz's users). I have explored the idea of using an lru cache of some sort on the tzinfo object itself, but there are two problems with this: 1. Calculating the hash of a datetime calls .utcoffset(), which means that it is necessary to, at minimum, do a `replace` on the datetime (and constructing a new datetime is a pretty considerable speed hit) 2. It will be a much bigger memory cost, since my current proposal uses approximately zero additional memory (not sure if the alignment stuff is platform-dependent or something, but it doesn't use additional memory on my linux computer). I realize this proposal is somewhat difficult to wrap your head around, so if anyone would like to chat with me about it in person, I'll be at PyCon sprints until Thursday morning. Best, Paul
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