Good afternoon all, I’m using a java.lang.StringBuilder to store some characters. I have no idea how many characters I’m going to store in advance, except that:
- 60% of the time, it is only (exactly) 7 characters
- 39% of the time, it is (roughly) 3500 characters
- 1% of the time, it is roughly 20k characters
How do we go about calculating the optimal initial buffer length that should be used?
Currently I’m using new java.lang.StringBuilder(4000) but that’s just because I was too lazy to think previously.
There are two factors here: time and memory consumption. The time is mostly influenced by the number of times
java.lang.AbstractStringBuilder.expandCapacity()is called. Of course the cost of each call is linear to the current size of the buffer, but I am simplifying here and just counting them:Number of
expandCapacity()(time)Default configuration (16 characters capacity)
StringBuilderwill expand 0 timesStringBuilderwill expand 8 timesStringBuilderwill expand 11 timesThe expected number of
expandCapacityis 3,23.Initial capacity of 4096 characters
StringBuilderwill expand 0 timesStringBuilderwill expand 3 timesThe expected number of
expandCapacityis 0,03.As you can see the second scenario seems much faster, as it very rarely has to expand the
StringBuilder(three time per every 100 inputs). Note however that first expands are less significant (copying small amount of memory); also if you add strings to the builder in huge chunks, it will expand more eagerly in less iterations.On the other hand the memory consumption grows:
Memory consumption
Default configuration (16 characters capacity)
StringBuilderwill occupy 16 charactersStringBuilderwill occupy 4K charactersStringBuilderwill occupy 32K charactersThe expected average memory consumption is: 1935 characters.
Initial capacity of 4096 characters
StringBuilderwill occupy 4K charactersStringBuilderwill occupy 32K charactersThe expected average memory consumption is: 4383 characters.
TL;DR
This makes me believe that enlarging the initial buffer to 4K will increase the memory consumption by more than two times while speeding up the program by two orders of magnitude.
The bottom line is: try! It is not that hard to write a benchmark that will process million strings of various length with different initial capacity. But I believe a bigger buffer might be a good choice.