Code Optimisation: Difference between revisions

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{{Important | The comparison of [[loadFile]] with preprocessFile* is not exactly fair as [[loadFile]] doesn't preprocess the file's content.<br><!--
{{Important | The comparison of [[loadFile]] with preprocessFile* is not exactly fair as [[loadFile]] doesn't preprocess the file's content.<br><!--
-->On the other hand, the loaded file cannot contain any {{cc|}} or {{codecomment|/* */}} comments nor any [[PreProcessor Commands|preprocessor instructions]].}}
-->On the other hand, the loaded file cannot contain any {{cc|}} or {{codecomment|/* */}} comments nor any [[PreProcessor Commands|preprocessor instructions]] (including debug informations like line numbers or file informations).}}


=== {{colorball|green|0.9}} if ===
=== {{colorball|green|0.9}} if ===

Revision as of 00:23, 10 September 2019

Template:SideTOC

This page is about Code Optimisation. For conception optimisation, see Mission Optimisation.

Introduction

This article will try to be a general guide about improving your code and its performance.

  • The first part (Rules) will focus on having a clean, readable and maintainable code.
  • The second part (Code optimisation) is about improving performance, sometimes trading it against code readability.
  • The third part (Equivalent commands performance) mentions commands that in appearance have identical effects but may differ in terms of performance according to the use you may have of them.
  • The fourth part (Conversion from earlier versions) is a hopefully helpful, short guide about useful new commands or syntaxes to replace the old ways.


Rules

In the domain of development, any rule is a rule of thumb. If a rule states for example that it is better that a line of code doesn't go over 80 characters, it doesn't mean that any line must not go over 80 characters; sometimes, the situation needs it. If you have a good structure, do not change your code to enforce a single arbitrary rule. If you break many of them, you may have to change something. Again, this is according to your judgement.

With that being said, here are the three basic rules to get yourself in the clear:

  1. Make it work
  2. Make it readable
  3. Optimise then

Make it work

Template:quote Your first goal when coding is to make your code do what you want it does. A good way to reach this objective is to read and getting inspired by other people's code. If you understand it by reading it once, it is probably a good source of inspiration.

  • When starting from scratch if you know what you want but miss the specific steps to get to your point, it is a good practice to write down in your native language what you want to do. E.g Get all the units near the city, and for each west soldier in them, add 30% damage.
  • Use -showScriptErrors startup parameter and make sure your code doesn't throw errors. Not only will your code run slower but it may also not work at all. Be sure to read the error, isolate the issue and sort it out thanks to this Wiki.
  • Read your Arma RPT (report) to read more details about the error that happened in your code.

Make it readable

Whether you are cleaning your code or a different person's, you must understand the code without twisting your brain:

  • While SQF is (non-noticeably) impacted by variable name length, this should not take precedence on the fact that code must be readable by a human being. Variables like _u instead of _uniform should not be present.
  • One-lining (putting everything in one statement) memory improvement is most of the time not worth the headache it gives when trying to read it. Don't overuse it.
  • Indentation is important for the human mind, and space is too. Space is free, use it.
  • Same goes for line return; it helps to see a code block wrapping multiple common instructions instead of having to guess where it starts and stops.
  • Do you see the same code multiple times, only with different parameters? Now is the time to write a function!
  • If you have a lot of if..else, you may want to look at a switch condition, or again break your code in smaller functions.
  • Is your function code far too long? Break it in understandable-sized bites for your own sanity.
  • Finally, camel-casing (namingLikeThis) your variables will naturally make the code more readable, especially for long names.
_i is an accepted variable standard for a for..do iteration

See the following code:

_w=[]; {_w pushbackunique primaryweapon _x} foreach((allunits+alldeadmen) select{_x call bis_fnc_objectside==east});

The same example is far more readable with proper spacing, good variable names and intermediate results:

_weaponNames = [];
_allUnitsAliveAndDead = allUnits + allDeadMen;
_allEastAliveAndDead = _allUnitsAliveAndDead select { _x call BIS_fnc_objectSide == east };
{ _weaponNames pushBackUnique primaryWeapon _x } forEach _allEastAliveAndDead;

Constants

Using a hard-coded constant more than once? Use preprocessor directives rather than storing it in memory or cluttering your code with numbers. Such as:

a = _x + 1.053;
b = _y + 1.053;

And

_buffer = 1.053;
a = _x + _buffer;
b = _y + _buffer;

Becomes

#define BUFFER 1.053 // note: no semicolon
_a = _x + BUFFER;
_b = _y + BUFFER;
Using the #define macro only works within the current SQF file. Such definition will not propagate anywhere else.

Global "constants" can be defined via a Description.ext declaration, though, and accessed using getMissionConfigValue command:

Declaration in Description.ext:

var1 = 123;
var2 = "123";
var3[] = {1,2,3};
rand = __EVAL(random 999);

Usage in code:

hint str getMissionConfigValue "var1"; // 123									// 0.0007 ms
hint str getMissionConfigValue "var2"; // "123"									// 0.0008 ms
hint str getMissionConfigValue "var3"; // [1,2,3]								// 0.0017 ms
hint str getMissionConfigValue "rand"; // constant random, for example 935.038	// 0.0007 ms

The getMissionConfigValue command searching Description.ext from top to bottom, it is better for a matter of performance to put all your definitions at the top of the file.

Optimise then

Once you know what is what, you can understand your code better.

  • Use private variables instead of global variables (preceded with an underscore) as much as possible
  • You were iterating multiple times on the same array?
    • You should be able to spot your issue now.
  • Are you using execVM on the same file, many times?
  • Is your variable name far too long?
    • Find a smaller name, according to the variable scope:

e.g

{ _opforUnitUniform = uniform _x; systemChat _opforUnitUniform; } forEach _allOpforUnits;

becomes

{ _uniform = uniform _x; systemChat _uniform; } forEach _allOpforUnits;


Code optimisation

Please note: Tests and benchmarks were done with the latest Arma 3 version at the time Arma 3 logo black.png1.82 with Tank DLC. Game engine performance may have changed since.
Benchmark result in milliseconds (ms) is an average for 10000 iterations.
Template:colorball means you must change your ways today, or with us you will ride…

Template:colorball means you may want to look at it if you are targeting pure performance

Template:colorball means the gain is little to insignificant. Going through your code for this replacement is not worth it. You may only consider it for future code.

Scheduled and unscheduled environment

There are two code environment types, scheduled and unscheduled.

  • A scheduled script has an execution time limit of 3 ms before being suspended to the benefit of another script until its turn comes back. It is a bit slower than unscheduled but suspending (sleep, waitUntil) is allowed.
  • An unscheduled script is not watched and will run without limitations. It is recommended for time-critical scripts, but suspending (sleep, waitUntil) is not allowed!
See Scheduler full article for more information.

Template:colorball Lazy evaluation

private _myVar = [33, 66] select (false);										// 0.0013 ms
private _myVar = if (false) then { 33; } else { 66; };							// 0.0020 ms
private "_myVar"; if (false) then { _myVar = 33; } else { _myVar = 66; };	 	// 0.0025 ms

Template:colorball Successive condition check

In SQF the following code will check all and every conditions, even if one fails:

if (condition1 && condition2 && condition3) then { /* thenCode */ };

This code will check condition1, and if it is not true condition2 and condition3 will execute anyway. To avoid this behaviour, you can either imbricate ifs or use lazy evaluation such as the following:

if (condition1 && { condition2 } && { condition3 }) then { /* thenCode */ };

This method will stop condition evaluation on the first false statement.

Using lazy evaluation is not always the best way as it could speed up the code as well as slow it down, depending on the current condition being evaluated:

["true  || { false  || {false}}", nil, 100000] call BIS_fnc_codePerformance;	// 0.00080 ms
["true  ||  {false} || {false} ", nil, 100000] call BIS_fnc_codePerformance;	// 0.00105 ms
["false ||   false  ||  false  ", nil, 100000] call BIS_fnc_codePerformance;	// 0.00123 ms
["true  ||   false  ||  false  ", nil, 100000] call BIS_fnc_codePerformance;	// 0.00128 ms
["false ||  {false} || {false} ", nil, 100000] call BIS_fnc_codePerformance;	// 0.00200 ms

Template:colorball Concatenating multiple small strings together

myString = myString + otherString works fine for small strings, however the bigger the string gets the slower the operation becomes:

myString = ""; for "_i" from 1 to 10000 do { myString = myString + "123" };		// 290 ms

The solution is to use a string array that you will concatenate later:

strings = [];
for "_i" from 1 to 10000 do {strings pushBack "123"};
strings = strings joinString "";												// 30 ms

Template:colorball Manipulating arrays

Adding elements

New commands append and pushBack hold the best score.

_array = [0,1,2,3]; _array append [4,5,6];										// 0.0020 ms
_array = [0,1,2,3]; _array = _array + [4,5,6];									// 0.0023 ms
_array = [0,1,2,3]; { _array set [count _array, _x]; } forEach [4,5,6];			// 0.0080 ms
_array = [0,1,2,3]; _array pushBack 4;											// 0.0016 ms
_array = [0,1,2,3]; _array = _array + [4];										// 0.0021 ms
_array = [0,1,2,3]; _array set [count _array, _x]; 								// 0.0022 ms

Removing elements

_array = [0,1,2,3]; _array deleteAt 0;															// 0.0015 ms
_array = [0,1,2,3]; _array set [0, objNull]; _array = _array - [objNull];						// 0.0038 ms
_array = [0,1,2,3]; _array deleteRange [1, 2];													// 0.0018 ms
_array = [0,1,2,3]; { _array set [_x, objNull] } forEach [1,2]; _array = _array - [objNull];	// 0.0078 ms

Template:colorball Multiplayer recommendations

  • Do not saturate the network with information: publicVariable or public setVariable shouldn't be used at high frequency, else everyone's performance experience is at risk!
  • The server is supposed to have a good CPU and a lot of memory, use it: store functions, run them from it, send only the result to the clients
  • publicVariable and setVariable variable name length impacts network, be sure to send well-named, understandable variables
    (and not playerNameBecauseThePlayerIsImportantAndWeNeedToKnowWhoTheyAreAllTheTimeEspeciallyInsideThisImpressiveFunction)
  • Use, use and use remoteExec & remoteExecCall. Ditch BIS_fnc_MP for good!
See Multiplayer Scripting for more information.

Equivalent commands performance

Template:colorball call

call without arguments is faster than call with arguments:

call {};										// 0.0007 ms
123 call {};									// 0.0013 ms

Since the variables defined in the parent scope will be available in the called child scope, it could be possible to speed up the code by avoiding passing arguments all together, for example writing:

player addEventHandler ["HandleDamage", { call my_fnc_damage }];

instead of:

player addEventHandler ["HandleDamage", { _this call my_fnc_damage }];


Template:colorball loadFile, preprocessFile and preprocessFileLineNumbers

// myFile.sqf is an empty file
loadFile "myFile.sqf";					// 0.219 ms
preprocessFile "myFile.sqf";			// 0.353 ms
preprocessFileLineNumbers "myFile.sqf";	// 0.355 ms
// myFile.sqf is BIS_fnc_showRespawnMenu
loadFile "myFile.sqf";					// 0.3516 ms
preprocessFile "myFile.sqf";			// 2.75 ms
preprocessFileLineNumbers "myFile.sqf"; // 2.73 ms
// myFile.sqf is a missing file
loadFile "myFile.sqf";					// 0.692 ms
preprocessFile "myFile.sqf";			// 0.6225 ms
preprocessFileLineNumbers "myFile.sqf";	// 0.6225 ms
The comparison of loadFile with preprocessFile* is not exactly fair as loadFile doesn't preprocess the file's content.
On the other hand, the loaded file cannot contain any //  or /* */ comments nor any preprocessor instructions (including debug informations like line numbers or file informations).

Template:colorball if

if..then { /* thenCode */ };											// 0.0011 ms
if..exitWith { /* exitCode */ };										// 0.0014 ms
if..then { /* thenCode */ } else { /* elseCode */ };					// 0.0015 ms
if..then [{ /* thenCode */ }, { /* elseCode */ }]						// 0.0016 ms

Template:colorball if and select

Use [array] select Boolean instead of the lazy-evaluated if.

_result = ["false result", "true result"] select true;					// 0.0011 ms
_result = if (true) then { "true result"; } else { "false result"; };	// 0.0017 ms

Template:colorball if and switch

_result = call {
	if (false) exitWith {};
	if (false) exitWith {};
	if (true)  exitWith {};
	if (false) exitWith {};
	if (false) exitWith {};
};							// 0.0032 ms
_result = switch (true) do {
	case (false): {};
	case (false): {};
	case (true) : {};
	case (false): {};
	case (false): {};
};							// 0.0047 ms

Template:colorball for

The for..from..to..do is twice as fast as its alternative syntax, for..do.

for "_i" from 0 to 10 do { /* forCode */ };										// 0.015 ms
for [{_i = 0}, {_i < 100}, {_i = _i + 1}] do { /* forCode */ };					// 0.030 ms

Template:colorball forEach vs count vs findIf

Both forEach and count commands will step through all the array elements and both commands will contain reference to current element with the _x variable. However, count loop is a little faster than forEach loop, but it does not benefit from the _forEachIndex variable.
Also, there is a limitation as the code inside count expects Boolean or Nothing while the command itself returns Number. This limitation is very important if you try to replace your forEach by count. If you have to add a extra true/false/nil at the end to make count work, it will be slower than the forEach equivalent.

{ diag_log _x } count   [1,2,3,4,5];											// 0.082 ms
{ diag_log _x } forEach [1,2,3,4,5];											// 0.083 ms
// with an empty array
_someoneIsNear = (allUnits findIf { _x  distance [0,0,0] < 1000 }) != -1;		// 0.0046 ms
_someoneIsNear = { _x distance [0,0,0] < 1000 } count allUnits > 0;				// 0.0047 ms
_someoneIsNear = {
	if (_x distance [0,0,0] < 1000) exitWith { true };
	false
} forEach allUnits;																// 0.0060 ms
// with a 30 items array
_someoneIsNear = (allUnits findIf { _x  distance [0,0,0] < 1000 }) != -1;		// 0.0275 ms
_someoneIsNear = { _x distance [0,0,0] < 1000 } count allUnits > 0;				// 0.0645 ms
_someoneIsNear = {
	if (_x distance [0,0,0] < 1000) exitWith { true };
	false
} forEach allUnits;																// 0.0390 ms

Template:colorball findIf

findIf stops array iteration as soon as the condition is met.

[0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9] findIf { _x == 2 };										// 0.0050 ms
{ if (_x == 2) exitWith { _forEachIndex; }; } forEach [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9];	// 0.0078 ms
_quantity = { _x == 2 } count [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9];							// 0.0114 ms

Template:colorball + and format

When concatenating more than two strings, format is faster than +.

format ["%1%2%3%4%5", "string1", "string2", "string3", "string4", "string5"];	// 0.0019 ms
"string1" + "string2" + "string3" + "string4" + "string5";						// 0.0021 ms

Template:colorball format and str

str 33;				// 0.0016 ms
format ["%1", 33];	// 0.0022 ms

Template:colorball private

Direct declaration (private _var = value) is faster than declaring then assigning the variable.

private _a = 1;
private _b = 2;
private _c = 3;
private _d = 4;
// 0.0023 ms
private ["_a", "_b", "_c", "_d"];
_a = 1;
_b = 2;
_c = 3;
_d = 4;
// 0.0040 ms

However, if you have to reuse the same variable in a loop, external declaration is faster.
The reason behind this is that a declaration in the loop will create, assign and delete the variable in each loop.
An external declaration creates the variable only once and the loop only assigns the value.

private ["_a", "_b", "_c", "_d"];
for "_i" from 1 to 10 do
{
	_a = 1; _b = 2; _c = 3; _d = 4;
};
// 0.0195 ms
for "_i" from 1 to 10 do
{
	private _a = 1; private _b = 2; private _c = 3; private _d = 4;
};
// 0.0235 ms

Template:colorball isNil

isNil "varName";					// 0.0007 ms
isNil {varName};					// 0.0012 ms

Template:colorball isEqualType and typeName

isEqualType is much faster than typeName

"string" isEqualType 33;			// 0.0006 ms
typeName "string" == typeName 33;	// 0.0018 ms

Template:colorball isEqualTo and count

// with a items array
allUnits isEqualTo [];				// 0.0040 ms
count allUnits == 0;				// 0.0043 ms

Template:colorball select and param

 [1,2,3] select 0;					// 0.0008 ms
 [1,2,3] param [0];					// 0.0011 ms

Template:colorball objectParent and vehicle

isNull objectParent player;			// 0.0013 ms
vehicle player == player;			// 0.0022 ms

Template:colorball nearEntities and nearestObjects

nearEntities is much faster than nearestObjects given on range and amount of objects within the given range. If range is over 100 meters it is highly recommended to use nearEntities over nearestObjects.

// tested with a NATO rifle squad amongst solar power plant panels on Altis at coordinates [20762,15837]
getPosATL player nearEntities [["Man"], 50];	// 0.0075 ms
nearestObjects [getPosATL player, ["Man"], 50];	// 0.0145 ms
nearEntities only searches for alive objects and on-foot soldiers.
In-vehicle units, killed units, destroyed vehicles, static objects and buildings will be ignored.

Template:colorball Global variables vs local variables

If you need to use global variable repeatedly in a loop, copy its value to local variable and use local variable instead:

SomeGlobalVariable = [123]; for "_i" from 1 to 100 do { SomeGlobalVariable select 0; }; // 0.13 ms

is noticeably slower than

SomeGlobalVariable = [123]; private _var = SomeGlobalVariable; for "_i" from 1 to 100 do { _var select 0; }; // 0.08 ms

Template:colorball Config path delimiter

>> is slightly faster than / when used in config path with configFile or missionConfigFile.

configFile >> "CfgVehicles";		// 0.0019 ms
configFile  / "CfgVehicles";		// 0.0023 ms
A config path can be stored in a variable for later use, saving CPU time: _cfgVehicles = configFile >> "CfgVehicles"

Template:colorball getPos* and setPos*

getPosWorld							// 0.0015 ms
getPosASL							// 0.0016 ms
getPosATL							// 0.0016 ms
getPos								// 0.0020 ms
position							// 0.0020 ms
getPosVisual						// 0.0021 ms
visiblePosition						// 0.0021 ms
getPosASLW							// 0.0023 ms
setPosWorld							// 0.0060 ms
setPosASL							// 0.0060 ms
setPosATL							// 0.0060 ms
setPos								// 0.0063 ms
setPosASLW							// 0.0068 ms
setVehiclePosition					// 0.0077 ms with "CAN_COLLIDE"
									// 0.0390 ms with "NONE"

Template:colorball toLower and toLowerANSI

// _myString is a 100 chars "aAaAaA(…)" string
toLower _myString;		// 0.0016 ms
toLowerANSI _myString;	// 0.0006 ms
Similar performance difference between toUpper and toUpperANSI.


Conversion from earlier versions

Each iteration of Bohemia games (Operation Flashpoint, Arma, Arma 2, Take On Helicopters, Arma 3) brought their own new commands, especially Arma 2 and Arma 3.
For that, if you are converting scripts from older versions of the engine, the following aspects should be reviewed.

Loops

Array operations

result = (arrayOfNumbers select { _x % 2 == 0 });	// 1.55 ms
result = [];
{
	if (_x % 2 == 0) then { result pushBack _x; };
} forEach arrayOfNumbers;							// 2.57 ms

String operations

String manipulation has been simplified with the following commands:

Number operations

Type comparison

Multiplayer

Parameters