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A class just to draw a grid of buttons. Has some interesting options
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Just a class that draws a grid. _COLS & _ROWS determine the grid size. Also in the init function where the buttons are created have a var __USE_COPY. if True is consistently , 80, 90% faster on my iPad Air 2.
import ui import copy import time _ROWS = 16 _COLS = 16 # class, just to draw a grid of button, also # should rotate. class grid(ui.View): def __init__(self): self.btns = [] # just create the buttons rows * columns __USE_COPY = False if not __USE_COPY: start = time.time() for i in range((_COLS * _ROWS) ): btn = ui.Button(title = str(i)) btn.action = self.hit_test self.btns.append(btn) self.add_subview(btn) finish = time.time() else: start = time.time() btn = ui.Button() for i in range((_COLS * _ROWS) ): new_btn = copy.copy(btn) new_btn.title = str(i) new_btn.action = self.hit_test self.btns.append(new_btn) self.add_subview(new_btn) finish = time.time() print finish - start self.style() def style(self): self.background_color = 'white' for btn in self.btns: btn.background_color = 'red' btn.tint_color = 'white' btn.border_width = .5 def layout(self): if self.superview: self.frame = superview.bounds w,h = self.width / _COLS, self.height / _ROWS x = y = 0 for btn in self.btns: btn.width, btn.height = w,h btn.x, btn.y = x * w, y * h x += 1 if not x % _COLS : x = 0 y += 1 def hit_test(self, sender): print 'hit - ', sender.title if __name__ == '__main__': x = grid().present('')
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When timing things, I like to use
elapsed_time.py
which allows you to write:with timer("download Pythonista Forums page"): html = requests.get('https://omz-forums.appspot.com').text
and it will print
Elapsed time (download Pythonista Forums page): 0:00:00.513742
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I ran some timings and did not see much difference between the two approaches:
Elapsed time (True): 0:00:00.285801 Elapsed time (True): 0:00:00.258893 Elapsed time (True): 0:00:00.270147 Elapsed time (True): 0:00:00.289374 Elapsed time (True): 0:00:00.283184 --> avg. 0.2774798 --> 8.56% faster Elapsed time (False): 0:00:00.369390 Elapsed time (False): 0:00:00.278358 Elapsed time (False): 0:00:00.288801 Elapsed time (False): 0:00:00.280331 Elapsed time (False): 0:00:00.289258 --> avg. 0.3012276
In both cases it almost always takes less than a third of a second to build all the cells.
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@ccc, I will run some timings later. I am sure I seen 80 to 90% increase. I did run it multiple times to make sure it wasn't a caching issue. Oh, well, I will just split them out 2 Functions and run the timings as you have with your timer function to see.
I ran it on an iPad 2 air, what did you run it on? I will also try my iphone 6 later, will be interesting to compare.
Thanks again
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import platform ; platform.platform()
# --> 'Darwin-14.0.0-iPad3,4-32bit'I am running iOS 8.3 so why is it still 32-bit??
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Elapsed time (False 16x16): 0:00:00.199482
Elapsed time (False 16x16): 0:00:00.221685
Elapsed time (False 16x16): 0:00:00.176133
Elapsed time (False 16x16): 0:00:00.166889
Elapsed time (False 16x16): 0:00:00.192668
avg 191371Elapsed time (True 16x16): 0:00:00.106144
Elapsed time (True 16x16): 0:00:00.103462
Elapsed time (True 16x16): 0:00:00.121247
Elapsed time (True 16x16): 0:00:00.109012
Elapsed time (True 16x16): 0:00:00.104777
avg 108,928
approx 43% speed increaseDarwin-14.0.0-iPad5,4-32bit
not sure why 32bit, this is what i get -
Sorry, tried to fix the formatting 3 times without luck
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@ccc, I don't understand the contextlib at all. I sort of think I know what your timer code is doing. I run the below code and it seems ok. Wanted to ask you if the below code is ok, or are there side effects I don't understand?
the code below can not run, it's just the conceptif __name__ == '__main__': def month_changing(sender, d) : if _DEBUG :print 'holy crap, month will change', sender, d with timer('Create Calender'): d = datetime.datetime(2015,11, 5) x = cal_view(200, date = d ) with timer('set an attribute'): x.day_widgets[15].day_ind_visible(True) x.month_will_change = month_changing x.present('sheet')
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To mix it up a little further.... I assume it all works. Just want to double check.
if __name__ == '__main__': def month_changing(sender, d) : with timer('Month Changing'): if _DEBUG :print 'holy crap, month will change', sender, d pass with timer('Create Calender'): d = datetime.datetime(2015,11, 5) x = cal_view(200, date = d ) with timer('set an attribute'): x.day_widgets[15].day_ind_visible(True) x.month_will_change = month_changing x.present('sheet')
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If the code above could run then it would run just as you expect it to run. :-)
The
contextlib
stuff is supercool in a mind bending way because it allows you to build your ownwith xxx:
context managers thru the magic of the builtinyield
command which is the like the quantum leap of Python.Yield
andyield from
are not easy to get fixed in you mind but they can be quite powerful once mastered. -
@ccc, ok thanks. Still learning the simple stuff at the moment. But will put it on my to learn list, it's a big list :) I am sure you got my meaning. The code runs, just too much to include here, wanted to show a real example rather than some test code.
Thanks...