Some days ago ago Apple released Swift as open source language with instructions for Ubuntu Linux 15.10. So I decided to do a couple of simple benchmarks just to test some basic general purpose things like cpu, functions, read/write and not sequential access to arrays, concurrent parallel execution where possibile.

UPDATE: Here is the source code, somebody asked for it, all the tests look almost the same in all languages. I've also add gccgo as compiler with "-O" optimization

Bench1

It generates 2 growable arrays with incremented numbers, then it returns the sum of some of their elements.

Fib

Unoptimized Fibonacci sequence, a recursive function.

Why this comparison?

Because 3 programming languages are:

Modern user-friendly typed languages

The syntax is very similar (at least for basic scenarios)

To see if the performance benefits are worth and evident or not

Test environment

CPU: Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 @3.00Ghz

OS: Ubuntu 15.10, Kernel Linux 4.2.0-19-generic

Golang: go version go1.5.2 linux/amd64,gccgo (Ubuntu 5.2.1-22ubuntu2) 5.2.1 20151010

NodeJS: Node v5.1.1

Swiftlang: Swift version 2.2-dev

Rustlang: rustc 1.5.0-beta.5 (b716bc93c 2015-12-02)

Performance

In all test is measured the total execution time with the time command. In NodeJS / Javascript the value is compilation+execution, all tests are run 3 times and the medium result is taken and rounded.

In the first test the winner is Rust, both Rust and Swift get a noticeable boost if the binary is compiled with "-O" flag.

Here the fastest is Swift, then Rust. It is a bit weird because they both compile in LLVM.

Syntax

All these new user-friendly typed languages have a very similar syntax. In Rust you have much more control in your code and some conversions aren't done automatically, I had to specify i as usize to use that integer as index.

In Go you have a specific operator <- to deal with channels.

Concurrency / Parallelism

I tried to run another benchmark, the sum of fib(45) + fib(43).

Golang: to enable all the cores, you have to put in your code runtime.GOMAXPROCS(num of cores you want to use)

Rust: there are several ways for different use cases, I used the 3rd part lib async-await, the result is correct but it seems the computation on one core slow down even if the task isn't finished yet . Upgrading from beta to Rust 1.5 stable I no longer have this issue.

. Upgrading from beta to Rust 1.5 stable I no longer have this issue. NodeJS: it is single thread, you can use all your cores running multiple instances of your code.

Swift: It should be possible to use libdispatch on Linux but I didn't tried it

Use cases and opinions

General use case: choose the one you like more, it is mostly a syntax and ecosystem issue.

Go: mature, concurrency, backend, micro services, CLI utilities

Node: mature, possible code sharing with frontend, it's JavaScript, functional features

Rust: low level control, safety, concurrency, speed, functional features

Swift: IOS native & OSX built-in, functional features

I didn't compare these languages to dynamic languages like ruby or python because there are already a lot of comparisons with them.

Personally I like JavaScript and its ES2015, ES2016 and I don't have a preferred typed language.

What's your choice? And for what? You can comment on HN or on Reddit.