Ikegami, I am curious if you can replicate my results with the substr idea plugged into your benchmark code? Update: the reason I ask is that I know you have a very fast 64 bit machine and there could be some differences between my much slower, older 32 bit machine.
use strict;
use warnings;
use Benchmark qw(:all);
print("This is Perl $]\n");
my %tests = (
repeat => 'my ($y,$m,$d) = $date =~ /(\\d\\d\\d\\d)(\\d\\d)(\\d\\d
+)/;',
range => 'my ($y,$m,$d) = $date =~ /(\\d{4})(\\d{2})(\\d{2})/;',
isook => 'my ($y,$m,$d) = $date =~ /(....)(..)(..)/s;',
unpack => 'my ($y,$m,$d) = unpack "A4 A2 A2", $date;',
substr => 'my $y = substr($date,0,4);my $m = substr($date,4,2);my
+$d = substr($date,6,2);'
);
# These don't result in any opcodes.
$_ = 'use strict; use warnings; our $date; '.$_
for values(%tests);
our $date = '20091202';
my $results = cmpthese(-3, \%tests);
__END__
This is Perl 5.010000
Rate range isook repeat unpack substr
range 151695/s -- -7% -8% -54% -85%
isook 162964/s 7% -- -1% -50% -84%
repeat 165314/s 9% 1% -- -49% -84%
unpack 326977/s 116% 101% 98% -- -68%
substr 1010101/s 566% 520% 511% 209% --
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