I'm looking through the source of StringIO
where it says says some notes:
- Using a real file is often faster (but less convenient).
- There's also a much faster implementation in C, called
cStringIO
, but it's not subclassable.
StringIO
just like a memory file object,
why is it slower than real file object?
Python's file handling is implemented entirely in C. This means that it's quite fast (at least in the same order of magnitude as native C code).
The StringIO library, however, is written in Python. The module itself is thus interpreted, with the associated performance penalties.
As you know, there is another module, cStringIO, with a similar interface, which you can use in performance-sensitive code. The reason this isn't subclassable is because it's written in C.
It is not neccessarily obvious from the source but python file objects is built straight on the C library functions, with a likely small layer of python to present a python class, or even a C wrapper to present a python class. The native C library is going to be highly optimised to read bytes and blocks from disk. The python StringIO library is all native python code - which is slower than native C code.
This is not actually about Python's interpreted nature:
BytesIO
is implemented in Python*, same asStringIO
, but still beats file I/O.In fact,
StringIO
is faster than file I/O underStringIO
's ideal use case (a single write to the beginning of an empty buffer). Actually, if the write is big enough it'll even beatcStringIO
. See my question here.So why is
StringIO
considered "slow"?StringIO
's real problem is being backed by immutable sequences, whetherstr
orunicode
. This is fine if you only write once, obviously. But, as pointed out by tdelaney's answer to my question, it slows down a ton (like, 10-100x) when writing to random locations, since every time it gets a write in the middle it has to copy the entire backing sequence.BytesIO
doesn't have this problem since it's backed by a (mutable)bytearray
instead. Likewise, whatevercStringIO
does, it seems to handle random writes much more easily. I'd guess that it breaks the immutability rule internally, since C strings are mutable.* Well, the version in
_pyio
is, anyway. The standard library version inio
is written in C.