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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2004-03-23 21:40:07 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2004-03-23 21:40:07 (GMT) |
commit | fee6f33e08b8b67d260bcf753dceaeb4184baf52 (patch) | |
tree | 6bf3427fce8f586b4ef3c92b8b4cc7adcb35fba6 /Doc | |
parent | 69200fa85b8825c52f05d54f1d6d3b58ea7fec6c (diff) | |
download | cpython-fee6f33e08b8b67d260bcf753dceaeb4184baf52.zip cpython-fee6f33e08b8b67d260bcf753dceaeb4184baf52.tar.gz cpython-fee6f33e08b8b67d260bcf753dceaeb4184baf52.tar.bz2 |
more markup nits
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/libprofile.tex | 25 |
1 files changed, 13 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libprofile.tex b/Doc/lib/libprofile.tex index 50db92e..c283fd6 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/libprofile.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/libprofile.tex @@ -104,15 +104,15 @@ This section is provided for users that ``don't want to read the manual.'' It provides a very brief overview, and allows a user to rapidly perform profiling on an existing application. -To profile an application with a main entry point of \samp{foo()}, you -would add the following to your module: +To profile an application with a main entry point of \function{foo()}, +you would add the following to your module: \begin{verbatim} import profile profile.run('foo()') \end{verbatim} -The above action would cause \samp{foo()} to be run, and a series of +The above action would cause \function{foo()} to be run, and a series of informative lines (the profile) to be printed. The above approach is most useful when working with the interpreter. If you would like to save the results of a profile into a file for later examination, you @@ -137,8 +137,9 @@ python /usr/local/lib/python1.5/profile.py myscript.py profile.py [-o output_file] [-s sort_order] \end{verbatim} -\samp{-s} only applies to stdout (i.e. \samp{-o} is not supplied. -Look in the \class{Stats} documentation for valid sort values. +\programopt{-s} only applies to standard output (\programopt{-o} is +not supplied). Look in the \class{Stats} documentation for valid sort +values. When you wish to review the profile, you should use the methods in the \module{pstats} module. Typically you would load the statistics data as @@ -151,7 +152,7 @@ p = pstats.Stats('fooprof') The class \class{Stats} (the above code just created an instance of this class) has a variety of methods for manipulating and printing the -data that was just read into \samp{p}. When you ran +data that was just read into \code{p}. When you ran \function{profile.run()} above, what was printed was the result of three method calls: @@ -199,8 +200,8 @@ p.sort_stats('file').print_stats('__init__') \end{verbatim} This will sort all the statistics by file name, and then print out -statistics for only the class init methods ('cause they are spelled -with \samp{__init__} in them). As one final example, you could try: +statistics for only the class init methods (since they are spelled +with \code{__init__} in them). As one final example, you could try: \begin{verbatim} p.sort_stats('time', 'cum').print_stats(.5, 'init') @@ -213,7 +214,7 @@ of its original size, then only lines containing \code{init} are maintained, and that sub-sub-list is printed. If you wondered what functions called the above functions, you could -now (\samp{p} is still sorted according to the last criteria) do: +now (\code{p} is still sorted according to the last criteria) do: \begin{verbatim} p.print_callers(.5, 'init') @@ -423,7 +424,7 @@ identifying the basis of a sort (example: \code{'time'} or When more than one key is provided, then additional keys are used as secondary criteria when there is equality in all keys selected -before them. For example, \samp{sort_stats('name', 'file')} will sort +before them. For example, \code{sort_stats('name', 'file')} will sort all the entries according to their function name, and resolve all ties (identical function names) by sorting by file name. @@ -495,14 +496,14 @@ print_stats(.1, 'foo:') \end{verbatim} would first limit the printing to first 10\% of list, and then only -print functions that were part of filename \samp{.*foo:}. In +print functions that were part of filename \file{.*foo:}. In contrast, the command: \begin{verbatim} print_stats('foo:', .1) \end{verbatim} -would limit the list to all functions having file names \samp{.*foo:}, +would limit the list to all functions having file names \file{.*foo:}, and then proceed to only print the first 10\% of them. \end{methoddesc} |