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Diffstat (limited to 'docs/index.html')
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/index.html | 15 | 
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 7 deletions
| diff --git a/docs/index.html b/docs/index.html index 06045cc..74e3283 100644 --- a/docs/index.html +++ b/docs/index.html @@ -45,12 +45,12 @@ that is left as is is wildcard matching code, the rest was either heavily refact  from scratch). The main features (call it USP) are:</p>
  <ul>
 -<li>low memory consumption and fragmentation (the win over <i>pugxml</i> is ~1.5 times, <i>TinyXML</i>
 -- ~4.5 times, <i>Xerces (DOM)</i> - ~7 times <a href="#annot-1"><sup>1</sup></a>)</li>
 -<li>extremely high parsing speed (the win over <i>pugxml</i> is ~11.8 times, <i>TinyXML</i> - ~13.6
 -times, <i>Xerces-DOM</i> - ~20 times <a href="#annot-1"><sup>1</sup></a></li>
 +<li>low memory consumption and fragmentation (the win over <i>pugxml</i> is ~1.3 times, <i>TinyXML</i>
 +- ~2.5 times, <i>Xerces (DOM)</i> - ~4.3 times <a href="#annot-1"><sup>1</sup></a>)</li>
 +<li>extremely high parsing speed (the win over <i>pugxml</i> is ~6 times, <i>TinyXML</i> - ~10
 +times, <i>Xerces-DOM</i> - ~17.6 times <a href="#annot-1"><sup>1</sup></a></li>
  <li>extremely high parsing speed (well, I'm repeating myself, but it's so fast, that it outperforms
 -<i>expat</i> by <b>2 times</b> on test XML) <a href="#annot-2"><sup>2</sup></a></li>
 +<i>expat</i> by <b>2.8 times</b> on test XML) <a href="#annot-2"><sup>2</sup></a></li>
  <li>more or less standard-conformant (it will parse any standard-compliant file correctly in w3c-compliance
  mode, with the exception of DTD related issues and XML namespaces)</li>
  <li>pretty much error-ignorant (it will not choke on something like <text>You & Me</text>,
 @@ -91,7 +91,8 @@ that, though it is a thing that will likely be in the next release.</li>  <hr>
  <a name="annot-1"><sup>1</sup><small> The tests were done on a 1 mb XML file with a 4 levels deep tree
 -with a small amount of text. The times are that of building DOM tree.</small> <br>
 +with a small amount of text. The times are that of building DOM tree. <i>pugixml</i> was run in default
 +parsing mode, so differences in speed are even bigger with minimal settings.</small> <br>
  <a name="annot-2"><sup>2</sup><small> Obviously, you can't estimate time of building DOM tree for a
  SAX parser, so the times of reading the data into storage that closely represented the structure of
  an XML file were measured.</small>
 @@ -1042,7 +1043,7 @@ OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.  <hr>
 -<p>Revised 6 November, 2006</p>
 +<p>Revised 7 November, 2006</p>
  <p><i>© Copyright <a href="mailto:arseny.kapoulkine@gmail.com">Arseny Kapoulkine</a> 2006. All Rights Reserved.</i></p>
  </body>
  </html>
 | 
