| It was a non sequitur, and a straw man - you said that python was 5 times slower than C at best and 30-50 times slower than C at worst on some benchmarks. dnu pointed out that the benchmarks did not represent real-world Python code, since real-world code uses C libraries for performance-intensive stuff. You responded by saying that programs that are 90% C and 10% Python are unrealistic. Nobody ever suggested using programs that were 90% C and 10% Python, or said that that kind of usage was common. That didn't follow what dnu said at all. You weren't "reiterating" anything - you never said anything about "your uses", coldtea did, much farther up the thread. (If you're coldtea, then I understand your point, but if that's the case, you should have made that clear, as it vastly changes the context of what you were saying). You just brought up some benchmarks, which are not representative of how Python is used in the real world. I see how you could have intended to imply that this was "your uses" by saying that coldtea must have unusual uses if he got go/2 performance out of Python, but this was hardly clear, if it is the case. Regardless, you totally misrepresented dnu's point. As for your arguments against my points, the 80/20 rule, while obviously impossible to definitively prove, has far more authoritative supporters than it does detractors. If you haven't experienced that being the case, then that's good and well for you, but the experience of many others suggests that it usually is (in fact, it's usually stated as being closer to 90/10 than 80/20). Your Django argument falls flat if you look at it more closely. Sure, Django might introduce some slowness, but the vast majority of web performance is in the networking and database layers, not the application layer. Your choice of language has little to no bearing on the networking aspect of things, but what do you think the database drivers are written in? C, or an equivalent. 10% of the code that has 90% of the performance impact - sound familiar? And you interact with database drivers most of the time exactly how I said - by using a Python library that wraps around a C library to run the database. >>Quit with the straw man arguments - they add nothing to the discussion.
>Neither do unwarranted accusations of straw man arguments. I apologize if I come across as insulting - it is not my intention. My phrasing in the grandparent comment was overly antagonistic, and I'm about to edit it to fix that. But my accusations of straw man arguments were correct. |
It was neither, and repetition is not an argument. Let me paraphrase the conversation in the desperate hope you will at least read this since you refuse to read the thread you are discussing:
Me: if you are seeing 2x slower, then that seems like unusual uses of python. Him: I think some real world uses of python are 90% C libraries and 10% python Me: I feel the cases you are referring to are the unusual ones I spoke of.
>You weren't "reiterating" anything - you never said anything about "your uses"
Yes, I did: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5202119
>You must have some very unusual uses for that to be true
Wow, its like I am really saying exactly what I told you I was saying!
>Your Django argument falls flat if you look at it more closely. Sure, Django might introduce some slowness, but the vast majority of web performance is in the networking and database layers, not the application layer
That is completely, and entirely false. Scripting language web frameworks like django, rails, zend, etc are dozens to hundreds of times slower than similar frameworks in compiled languages.
>But my accusations of straw man arguments were correct.
No, they were not. And your continued insistence that your arrogant and pointless accusation was correct is absurd. If you don't wish to read something, don't reply to it.