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@solved C# with the same code is twice as fast

i am parsing a phred33 fastq file in perl and it is taking a considerable amount of time (on the order of 15 minutes). The fastq file is about 3 gigs. Are there any reasonable ways to make this faster?

$file=shift;
open(FILE,$file);
open(FILEFA,">".$file.".fa");
open(FILEQA,">".$file.".qual");
while($line=<FILE>)
{
    chomp($line);
    if($line=~m/^@/)
    {


    $header=$line;
    $header =~ s/@/>/g;
    $seq=<FILE>;
    chomp($seq);
    $nothing=<FILE>;
    $nothing="";
    $fastq=<FILE>;

    print FILEFA $header."\n";
    print FILEFA $seq."\n";
    $seq="";
    print FILEQA $header."\n";

        @elm=split("",$fastq);
        $i=0;
        while(defined($elm[$i]))
        {
            $Q = ord($elm[$i]) - 33;
            if($Q!="-23")
            {
            print FILEQA $Q." ";
            }
            $i=$i+1;
        }
        print FILEQA "\n";
    }
}
print $file.".fa\n";
print $file.".qual\n";
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المحلول

There's next to no CPU being used here. it's IO bound, so it's mostly the time to read through 3GB. There are micro-optimisations (and other cleanups) that can be done.

First, always use use strict; use warnings;.

The main code is

my @elm = split(//, $fastq);
my $i=0;
while(defined($elm[$i])) {
    my $Q = ord($elm[$i]) - 33;
    if($Q!="-23") {
        print FILEQA $Q." ";
    }
    $i=$i+1;
}

The purpose of if($Q!="-23") is to check if the character is a newline, which you wouldn't have to do if you did chomp($fastq);. (What's with the quotes around -23?!)

chomp($fastq);
my @elm = split(//, $fastq);
my $i=0;
while(defined($elm[$i])) {
    my $Q = ord($elm[$i]) - 33;
    print FILEQA $Q." ";
    $i=$i+1;
}
print FILEQA "\n";

Using a while loop just complicates things. Use a for loop when you have a known number of iterations.

chomp($fastq);
for (split(//, $fastq)) {
    print FILEQA (ord($_)-33)." ";
}
print FILEQA "\n";

It might help a bit to turn that inside out.

chomp($fastq);
print FILEQA join(' ', map ord($_)-33, split //, $fastq), "\n";

On second thought, not inside out enough :)

$fastq =~ s/(.)/(ord($1)-33) . " "/eg;
print FILEQA $fastq;

But what it we precalculated the translations? Then we wouldn't have to call a sub (the /e code) repeatedly.

my %map = map { chr($_) => ($_-33)." " } 0x00..0xFF;

$fastq =~ s/(.)/$map{$1}/g;
print FILEQA $fastq;

After a bit more cleanup, we get:

use strict;
use warnings;

my %map = map { chr($_) => ($_-33)." " } 0x00..0xFF;

my $file = shift;

my $fa_file   = "$file.fa";
my $qual_file = "$file.qual";

open(my $FILE,   '<', $file     ) or die $!;
open(my $FILEFA, '>', $fa_file  ) or die $!;
open(my $FILEQA, '>', $qual_file) or die $!;

while (my $header = <$FILE>) {
    next if $header !~ /^@/;

    my $seq = <$FILE>;
    <$FILE>;
    my $fastq = <$FILE>;

    $header =~ s/@/>/g;
    $fastq =~ s/(.)/$map{$1}/g;

    print $FILEFA $header;
    print $FILEFA $seq;

    print $FILEQA $header;
    print $FILEQA $fastq;
}

print "$fa_file\n";
print "$qual_file\n";
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