@DirkEddelbuettel @JDLong Yes; I think that we should work on that tag wiki a little more over the next few weeks. Some of the other tags have done a really nice job (e.g. see the Java tag).
Currently, it's just mostly what I stole off wikipedia.
Just looked at the 'about Java' tag -- overkill in my book. Why rewrite a Wikipedia article? Just link to it. As the timeless philosopher JD once said: "this collaborative editing thing ... may catch on one day."
@DirkEddelbuettel glad to see I'm being quoted. I only have one published article and it's on the topic of cow shit. So it makes gathering references quite hard.
I may be sniffing glue, but I thought rpy2 was for calling R from Python. And I want to call some Python from R... so can it do that or do I need something else?
I was creating something similar for a while (code.google.com/p/rjscript), but never got around to finishing it (before "Gabor" rolled out rJython...).
(need this eventually to parse javascript in R for a separate project...)
Not sure how effectively the Jython/Python interface works...
Oh wow. I actually met Flavor Flav once back in high school. I had track practice up by Yankee stadium, and he was shooting a music video around the track.
so I have some code that calls amazon web services... sends files to S3, fires up EMR jobs, etc. There's a low level API to AWS that involves hashing access codes, and some low level junk. That's too low level for this economist. The higher level tools are spread across multiple packages. So there's a set of command line tools written in Ruby for controlling EMR. There's some different command line tools for sending/receiving files from S3. I'm calling these two sets of tools using system()
it looks like Bobo has implemented all the low level AWS api calls in a single high level Python packagehttp://code.google.com/p/boto/
I thinkt he previous suggestion of RSPython may be your best bet, but it is not clear t me that you can use re-compiled .pyc files, i.e., some Python package, from with it
I am sure there is a hack, wherein you could literally source in the bits of boto you find useful, but that would make me nervous since Python classes tend to call libraries only as needed, so you might end up missing some critical piece of boto and not even know it
I find these high-level language marriages kind of poor. It makes sense, to me, to want to call C or Fortran from a higher-level language, but only in small doses, which is why inline is teh awesomes
This rJython seems working by making strings with commands and passing them to Jython to parse and evaluate... Isn't it then better to run python through pipe and execute boto this way?