In another question, the accepted answer suggested replacing a (very cheap) if statement in Python code with a try/except block to improve performance.
Coding style issues aside, and assuming that the exception is never triggered, how much difference does it make (performance-wise) to have an开发者_运维问答 exception handler, versus not having one, versus having a compare-to-zero if-statement?
Why don't you measure it using the timeit
module? That way you can see whether it's relevant to your application.
OK, so I've just tried the following:
import timeit
statements=["""\
try:
b = 10/a
except ZeroDivisionError:
pass""",
"""\
if a:
b = 10/a""",
"b = 10/a"]
for a in (1,0):
for s in statements:
t = timeit.Timer(stmt=s, setup='a={}'.format(a))
print("a = {}\n{}".format(a,s))
print("%.2f usec/pass\n" % (1000000 * t.timeit(number=100000)/100000))
Result:
a = 1
try:
b = 10/a
except ZeroDivisionError:
pass
0.25 usec/pass
a = 1
if a:
b = 10/a
0.29 usec/pass
a = 1
b = 10/a
0.22 usec/pass
a = 0
try:
b = 10/a
except ZeroDivisionError:
pass
0.57 usec/pass
a = 0
if a:
b = 10/a
0.04 usec/pass
a = 0
b = 10/a
ZeroDivisionError: int division or modulo by zero
So, as expected, not having any exception handler is slightly faster (but blows up in your face when the exception happens), and try/except
is faster than an explicit if
as long as the condition is not met.
But it's all within the same order of magnitude and unlikely to matter either way. Only if the condition is actually met, then the if
version is significantly faster.
This question is actually answered in the Design and History FAQ:
A try/except block is extremely efficient if no exceptions are raised. Actually catching an exception is expensive.
This question is misleading. If you assume the exception is never triggered, neither one is optimal code.
If you assume the exception is triggered as part of an error condition, you are already outside the realm of wanting optimal code (and you probably aren't handling it at a fine-grained level like that anyway).
If you are using the exception as part of the standard control flow - which is the Pythonic "ask forgiveness, not permission" way - then the exception is going to be triggered, and the cost depends on the kind of exception, the kind of if, and what percentage of time you estimate the exception happens.
In Python 3.11,
“Zero-cost” exceptions are implemented. The cost of try statements is almost eliminated when no exception is raised. (Contributed by Mark Shannon in bpo-40222.)
https://docs.python.org/3.11/whatsnew/3.11.html#optimizations
Q: Is try/catch
costly in python?
Should i be concerned when I use try catch? In what way?
This is just a summary of the answers already given.
A: When there is an exception if
is much faster. Otherwise no.
@SuperNova writes that exceptions are at zero cost so it is faster than having an if-statement when no exception. However, handling exceptions is costly so:
Use try for things that can fail. If possible, avoid try for things you know will fail
Example:
- Good case, use try:
try:
x = getdata() # an external function
except:
print('failed. Retrying')
- Bad case, here if-version is preferred:
y = f(x) # f never fails but often returns 0
try:
z = 1 / y # this fails often
except:
print('failed.')
# if-version
y = f(x)
if y != 0:
z = 1 / y
else:
print('failed.')
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