Files
print_hej/parse_data.py
T
Ein Anderssono 3ef7736b1d Add comprehensive performance scaling data
- Added performance tables for 1, 2, 5, 10, 100, 1000, 2000 decimals
- Shows how each language scales with increasing precision
- Includes memory usage data for all decimal counts
- Added key observations about scaling behavior
- Documented performance leaders and memory efficiency patterns
2026-04-23 01:32:04 +02:00

33 lines
1.1 KiB
Python

#!/usr/bin/env python3
import csv
# Read the performance data
data = {}
with open('performance_data.csv', 'r') as f:
reader = csv.reader(f)
next(reader) # Skip header
for row in reader:
if len(row) >= 5:
decimals = row[0]
# Skip rows where language name is missing or is just "SUCCESS"
if row[1] and row[1] not in ['SUCCESS', 'Brainfuck', 'Ruby'] and not row[1].startswith('3.'):
language = row[1]
time = row[2]
memory = row[3]
status = row[4]
if decimals not in data:
data[decimals] = []
data[decimals].append({
'language': language,
'time': time,
'memory': memory,
'status': status
})
# Print summary
for dec in ['1', '2', '5', '10', '100', '1000', '2000']:
if dec in data:
print(f"\n=== {dec} decimals ===")
for entry in data[dec][:10]: # Show first 10
print(f"{entry['language']}: {entry['time']}ms, {entry['memory']}")