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authorBenjamin Peterson <benjamin@python.org>2011-02-24 02:53:05 (GMT)
committerBenjamin Peterson <benjamin@python.org>2011-02-24 02:53:05 (GMT)
commit5390d00cc6b99a375140f22e8d75580c1f4cb0a4 (patch)
tree5930b98544ee4cbc059f56612d3879c452d80733
parent634ef9cb81ad66b335778422cd7e51bb483b9e3e (diff)
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rewrite
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/io.rst51
1 files changed, 25 insertions, 26 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/library/io.rst b/Doc/library/io.rst
index 9828662..0584b70 100644
--- a/Doc/library/io.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/io.rst
@@ -788,31 +788,30 @@ Text I/O
Performance
-----------
-This section discusses the performance of the provided concrete IO
+This section discusses the performance of the provided concrete I/O
implementations.
Binary I/O
^^^^^^^^^^
-By reading and writing only large chunks of data even when the user asks
-for a single byte, buffered I/O is designed to hide any inefficiency in
-calling and executing the operating system's unbuffered I/O routines. The
-gain will vary very much depending on the OS and the kind of I/O which is
-performed (for example, on some contemporary OSes such as Linux, unbuffered
-disk I/O can be as fast as buffered I/O). The bottom line, however, is
-that buffered I/O will offer you predictable performance regardless of the
-platform and the backing device. Therefore, it is most always preferable to
-use buffered I/O rather than unbuffered I/O.
+By reading and writing only large chunks of data even when the user asks for a
+single byte, buffered I/O hides any inefficiency in calling and executing the
+operating system's unbuffered I/O routines. The gain depends on the OS and the
+kind of I/O which is performed. For example, on some modern OSes such as Linux,
+unbuffered disk I/O can be as fast as buffered I/O. The bottom line, however,
+is that buffered I/O offers predictable performance regardless of the platform
+and the backing device. Therefore, it is most always preferable to use buffered
+I/O rather than unbuffered I/O for binary datal
Text I/O
^^^^^^^^
Text I/O over a binary storage (such as a file) is significantly slower than
-binary I/O over the same storage, because it implies conversions from
-unicode to binary data using a character codec. This can become noticeable
-if you handle huge amounts of text data (for example very large log files).
-Also, :meth:`TextIOWrapper.tell` and :meth:`TextIOWrapper.seek` are both
-quite slow due to the reconstruction algorithm used.
+binary I/O over the same storage, because it requires conversions between
+unicode and binary data using a character codec. This can become noticeable
+handling huge amounts of text data like large log files. Also,
+:meth:`TextIOWrapper.tell` and :meth:`TextIOWrapper.seek` are both quite slow
+due to the reconstruction algorithm used.
:class:`StringIO`, however, is a native in-memory unicode container and will
exhibit similar speed to :class:`BytesIO`.
@@ -820,9 +819,8 @@ exhibit similar speed to :class:`BytesIO`.
Multi-threading
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-:class:`FileIO` objects are thread-safe to the extent that the operating
-system calls (such as ``read(2)`` under Unix) they are wrapping are thread-safe
-too.
+:class:`FileIO` objects are thread-safe to the extent that the operating system
+calls (such as ``read(2)`` under Unix) they wrap are thread-safe too.
Binary buffered objects (instances of :class:`BufferedReader`,
:class:`BufferedWriter`, :class:`BufferedRandom` and :class:`BufferedRWPair`)
@@ -837,12 +835,13 @@ Reentrancy
Binary buffered objects (instances of :class:`BufferedReader`,
:class:`BufferedWriter`, :class:`BufferedRandom` and :class:`BufferedRWPair`)
are not reentrant. While reentrant calls will not happen in normal situations,
-they can arise if you are doing I/O in a :mod:`signal` handler. If it is
-attempted to enter a buffered object again while already being accessed
-*from the same thread*, then a :exc:`RuntimeError` is raised.
-
-The above implicitly extends to text files, since the :func:`open()`
-function will wrap a buffered object inside a :class:`TextIOWrapper`. This
-includes standard streams and therefore affects the built-in function
-:func:`print()` as well.
+they can arise from doing I/O in a :mod:`signal` handler. If a thread tries to
+renter a buffered object which it is already accessing, a :exc:`RuntimeError` is
+raised. Note this doesn't prohibit a different thread from entering the
+buffered object.
+
+The above implicitly extends to text files, since the :func:`open()` function
+will wrap a buffered object inside a :class:`TextIOWrapper`. This includes
+standard streams and therefore affects the built-in function :func:`print()` as
+well.