On Sun, 31 Mar 2013 00:35:23 -0700, jmfauth wrote:
> This is not really the problem. "Serious users" may notice sooner or > later, Python and Unicode are walking in opposite directions > (technically and in spirit). > >>>> timeit.repeat("'a' * 1000 + 'ẞ'") > [1.1088995672090292, 1.0842266613261913, 1.1010779011941594] >>>> timeit.repeat("'a' * 1000 + 'z'") > [0.6362570846925735, 0.6159128762502917, 0.6200501673623791] Perhaps you should stick to Python 3.2, where ASCII strings are no faster than non-ASCII strings. Python 3.2 versus Python 3.3, no significant difference: # 3.2 py> timeit.repeat("'a' * 1000 + 'ẞ'") [1.7418999671936035, 1.7198870182037354, 1.763346004486084] # 3.3 py> timeit.repeat("'a' * 1000 + 'ẞ'") [1.8083378580026329, 1.818592812011484, 1.7922867869958282] Python 3.2, ASCII vs Non-ASCII: py> timeit.repeat("'a' * 1000 + 'z'") [1.756322135925293, 1.8002049922943115, 1.721085958480835] py> timeit.repeat("'a' * 1000 + 'ẞ'") [1.7209150791168213, 1.7162668704986572, 1.7260780334472656] In other words, if you stick to non-ASCII strings, Python 3.3 is no slower than Python 3.2. -- Steven -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list