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Mastering Python 2E

You're reading from   Mastering Python 2E Write powerful and efficient code using the full range of Python's capabilities

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2022
Last Updated in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800207721
Length 710 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Rick Hattem Rick Hattem
Author Profile Icon Rick Hattem
Rick Hattem
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started – One Environment per Project FREE CHAPTER 2. Interactive Python Interpreters 3. Pythonic Syntax and Common Pitfalls 4. Pythonic Design Patterns 5. Functional Programming – Readability Versus Brevity 6. Decorators – Enabling Code Reuse by Decorating 7. Generators and Coroutines – Infinity, One Step at a Time 8. Metaclasses – Making Classes (Not Instances) Smarter 9. Documentation – How to Use Sphinx and reStructuredText 10. Testing and Logging – Preparing for Bugs 11. Debugging – Solving the Bugs 12. Performance – Tracking and Reducing Your Memory and CPU Usage 13. asyncio – Multithreading without Threads 14. Multiprocessing – When a Single CPU Core Is Not Enough 15. Scientific Python and Plotting 16. Artificial Intelligence 17. Extensions in C/C++, System Calls, and C/C++ Libraries 18. Packaging – Creating Your Own Libraries or Applications 19. Other Books You May Enjoy
20. Index

Memory usage

So far, we have simply looked at the execution times and largely ignored the memory usage of the scripts. In many cases, the execution times are the most important, but memory usage should not be ignored. In almost all cases, CPU and memory are traded; an algorithm either uses a lot of CPU time or a lot of memory, which means that both do matter a lot.

Within this section, we are going to look at:

  • Analyzing memory usage
  • When Python leaks memory and how to avoid these scenarios
  • How to reduce memory usage

tracemalloc

Monitoring memory usage used to be something that was only possible through external Python modules such as Dowser or Heapy. While those modules still work, they are partially obsolete now because of the tracemalloc module. Let’s give the tracemalloc module a try to see how easy memory usage monitoring is nowadays:

import tracemalloc

if __name__ == '__main__':
    tracemalloc.start()

    # Reserve...
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