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by coolsunglasses
4814 days ago
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>You really need to go at least this far. Oh please. Nobody's ever done such a comparison across more than 2 or 3 languages or frameworks. Have you even seen the benchmarks in question? Why not just go do it, if it's so essential and straightforward? |
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Okay, let me clarify. When I say "you really need to go this far" I mean that stopping at any point before that (but after the simple metric of how many requests a second it can serve which they already do) makes no sense, IMHO. If you are going to compare frameworks and you want to go beyond that initial performance metric, you might as well aim high enough to be useful.
I agree you never see anything approaching that in other reviews/benchmarks. Is that a good reason to not try it here?
> Why not just go do it, if it's so essential and straightforward?
I'm envisioning this as a community process, not a "Go off and write this in 20 frameworks or you're useless" sort or ultimatum. As such, just speccing out a possibly route is helping.
Also, I plan to help with the existing benchmarks. After the second round, I pointed them out to the author of my favorite framework in the hopes he would have time to put together something for the benchmark, otherwise I was going to in the next week or two when I had time. I still plan to.
Oh, and that framework author's answer? That these benchmarks are laughable because all they measure is performance, and there's a clear performance to convenience trade-off shown in the results, and that of course there's a performance hit when the framework handles most the work for you. I have to say I agree. Sure, there's possibly some that are clear winners giving good performance with lots of conveniences for common operations, but is there any way to tell as much from the data presented so far?