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13:05
can confirm: f-strings are fast
Morning cbg, folks
ok good! I was waiting to use them until you confirmed that (-:
It's evening here right now. Lol
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ how fast?
@piRSquared should have timed that with medals as well
@piRSquared time to quit
@piRSquared sorry
13:08
@Arne had I tried, I would have botched it. @AndrasDeak nice try, can't get rid of me that easily (-:
:D
now do one that's pretty in hexadecimal
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais Antti had a hand in making it not-as-slow-as-it-needs-to-be bugs.python.org/issue27078 (and bugs.python.org/issue27078#msg273776 specifically for times)
Having something that is parsed as part of the syntax is always faster than a function call at runtime, correct?
correct.
^ that is how I understand it
13:10
I still don't understand how it can do anything before runtime, but it's enough if the interpreter understands it. At least I understand "1 specific opcode >> many other opcodes"
Hence f-strings are fast. As is [] faster than list() and {} faster than dict()
What is faster between lambda: [] and list?
you mean lambda x:[x] but please don't :P
You've got the method call resolution at runtime, followed by the actual call to the function, followed by returning the result back to the caller. It all adds up in the end
Don't you guys just wish there was a Python bot here that will let us run some one-line Python code here?
The IRC channel of /r/learnprogramming had that when I was last active there two years ago.
13:15
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais omg yes
That's pretty close though:

>>> time_it(list)
0.015620946884155273
>>> time_it(lambda: [])
0.015621185302734375
Wanna do it but I'm still figuring out how the sessions will work and the gen architecture.
If I have time
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais I think I would like... love you forever
Any program can be written in one line
It'd be so meta if it's also written in Python.
13:17
@OlivierMelançon you should time the function calls, with the ()
I imagine time_it calls the argument
it's just that

>>> def time_it(f):
... start = time.time()
... for _ in range(100000):
... x = f()
... print(time.time() - start)

With correct indentation
Ohhh that's time_it and not timeit, huh
\o cbg
Guess I need more sleep :D
13:19
@SeanFrancisN.Ballais We could write our own Python interpreter in Python to run Python in the Python chat
And use a a Lexer-Parser written in Python
Like ComPyl (plugging my library here)
Let's take that up a notch.
@OlivierMelançon I sure hope you run it with PyPy and not CPython
If performance becomes a problem for a toy interpreter in chat, I think it means we have issues
We could write our own operating system in Python to run a virtual machine written in Python which we use to write our own Python interpreter to run Python in the Python chat.
Sounds like the best idea
13:25
You know what, let's make the hardware in Python as well.
What about we teach a neural network written with Keras to understand Python?
No need for an interpreter anymore, it just kind of guess what the correct output would be most of the time
That's pretty interesting.
What if I consider that as my undergraduate thesis topic? Hahaha
Somebody must have tried it, no?
That's actually an interesting question yes
Perhaps!
I can already imagine the largeness of the training data. Oh my!
I mean, we have github
As a prototype, we can just try that on one-line programs
13:31
Hmm, that could be!
This is now increasing the number of possible undergraduate thesis topics I could undertake.
Like, guessing the output of simple arithmetic with a for-loop or an if-statement
I mean, I guess there's enough of a pattern there that deep learning could work
But, would it work for all cases?
Surely not
I got to wonder. If we are able to build such an ANN, would we be able to detect infinite loops?
I am guessing not.
@OlivierMelançon you're probably describing branch predictors
13:33
Oh... true
Oh wow. Didn't think of that. Lol
But not exactly because it has to guess the branch, but then also the output
He guys, can you recommend me some good books to learn python
I think you might find something useful here: sopython.com/wiki/What_tutorial_should_I_read%3F
13:48
imo, one of the best link for learning.
> This Python® Notes for Professionals book is compiled from Stack Overflow
Documentation, the content is written by the beautiful people at Stack Overflow.
ehm, that doesn't sound very good
> Chapter 201: Hidden Features
Section 201.1: Operator Overloading
magic methods on page 775
if I was learning a language I'd rather have a coherent flow of thoughts than a bag of content taken from SO Documentation of all places
DSM
DSM
Thursday morning cabbage for all.
cabbage
cbg dsm
14:04
yo @davidism, using [email protected] and it's real real good, good work
Thanks!
most intuitive framework I've used in a long time, love how it seems extremely modular
We closed over 150 issues / PRs on Click during the sprints, so it's time for an update there too.
DSM
DSM
Speaking of Flask, if those of us who work in corporate Python environments wanted to spearhead a funding drive, does anyone have good ideas for contacting companies en masse?
I got home and realized I didn't keep notes about which companies I passed out Pallets donation cards to. Waiting to hear back from PyCon to get a list of expo booths.
14:08
two huge things I miss about python during my time working in JS: decorators and list comprehensions. Although ramda slightly alleviates the pain of that
@DSM is that a thing companies do? I wouldn't know where to start. All we have is the palletsprojects.com/donate link and <[email protected]> email right now.
I talked with the CEO of TideLift which is working to get companies to fund open source. But we're not part of that (yet).
I wanted to convince my boss to open source a few of our very fancy libraries
DSM
DSM
@davidism: sometimes. The funny thing is, if Flask were proprietary, we'd just write a cheque and not even think about it -- we do the same with a number of JS and Java stuff we license. :-/
Oh, I mean organizing a drive, not donating directly. Use the link for that, it supports corporate checks. :-)
DSM
DSM
Oh, no, companies don't organize drives. But those of us in companies who are Friends of Flask, and who heard about the wildly different funding situations of Django and Flask, might be motivated to help correct that imbalance.
14:18
/opens_can_o_worms: As a user of open source... how do I choose which projects to contribute to? As I plan to develop tools at my new place of employment, this subject will come up in the coming year. Do I suggest they contribute to support Python, Pandas, Numpy, Flask (when I start using it)?
all of them?
DSM
DSM
@piRSquared: this is what happens when we don't listen to Hayek. ;-)
@piRSquared contribute to the project that you want to contribute to :D
don't force i
contribute to what you find the most useful for you and your company.
@AnttiHaapala talking about donations, I think
ah :D
same thing :D
DSM
DSM
14:23
It's basically the same way I choose any way I spend my money, I guess: a combination of need, interest, my estimate of whether my contribution will matter, etc. I suspect that things like Flask might get overlooked relative to something like numpy which has strong organizational support.
That's one of the things that TideLift wants to solve. Companies say what stack they're using, TideLift negotiates a price and divides up the funds to the projects.
I feel like I'm a walking advertisement now, and we're not even in the program. :-/
DSM
DSM
Don't worry, your :-| face limits your advertising powers. ;-)
"use it, or whatever"
@davidism how does TideLift decide?
not sure, I need to talk with them more
14:29
has anyone here worked with Pillow? I need to convert from P (pallete) mode to RGB
Like img = img.convert('RGB')?
yeah, like that
but that works with P as source
@IMCoins sorry, as one of the "authors" of that "book", that is completely without merit.
there is no editing. The ordering makes zero sense - arrays before lists and dictionaries for example.
Ok, I'll get me coat.
@davidism Questions I'd also ask: 1. Are they actively correcting imbalances? I imagine this requires surveys to assess current funding status. 2. Are they distributing it strictly based on relevance in the stack? If so, how do they calculate %relevance? I could think of more... but I won't
Does anyone knows of a neat way to make str.translate stop catching LookupError and KeyError. I see no way in the doc to make it raise on unknown character without breaking the whole purpose of the method
14:44
@AnttiHaapala It is not meant to be used to learn python from scratch imo. To me, it's just an excellent reference. Even though I found an error* in it.
so I suggest not linking that if someone asks for a good python book :P
It is a good python book. :(
it is not a good python book.
I don't know if I've ever seen a LookupError before. When does that usually get raised?
it might just be me but if I see "can anyone recommend a good python book?" I understand it as a request for input to learn the language from
14:47
it has got some good parts in it because I wrote them, but as a whole it is a expletively bad Python source.
Based on the discussion here: stackoverflow.com/questions/50394183/…
I just want to make sure I'm not wrong
Anyone with some expertise?
docs.python.org/3/library/exceptions.html#LookupError suggests it's only raised by codecs.lookup. So I guess str.translate's documentation means "if this operation raises LookupError (i.e., an instance of LookupError or an instance of an error that inherits from LookupError, e.g. KeyError)..."
@sshashank124 I don't agree with the dupe.
i'm listening
Splitting a string is different than finding a max string based on what its integer interpretation is
max(a.split(), key=int)
14:51
I see your point. I marked it as dup based on the fact that the problematic part of the code was due to a misunderstanding of the result of split() and the need to convert to an int
Hey guys. A realization of my lack of low-level understanding prompted me to look into how compilers and interpreters work. I learned in school but it was a while ago so I forgot (or never fully understood) most of it.
But yeah finding the max is not dependent only on that 1 approach. I'll reopen it
What about the discussion in the answer's comments
Can someone explain to me a situation where an interpreted language would outperform a compiled one? Maybe something with heavy preprocessing?
@Kevin yes, LookUpError is just the base class for Index and Key errors
@Aris94 not sure about outperform but in heavy IO usecases such as webservers, python and ruby are often chosen because the majority of the cpu time is used for fetching and serving files (IO stuff) and so the performance improvement is marginal over something like a C server
with the added benefit of much less code to write (as opposed to a C server)
14:55
I'm trying to improve this answer so str.translate raises an exception when the is not translation. But I want to do so without defying the whole purpose and traversing the string to check characters are in the table one by one
Here's a dumb approach: give translate an object that raises something other than a LookupError when the key doesn't exist.
>>> import collections
>>> d = {ord("a"): ord("b")}
>>> "cabbage".translate(d)
'cbbbbge'
>>> "cabbage".translate(collections.defaultdict(lambda: 1/0, d))
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <lambda>
ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
ewwww lol
awful :D
@Kevin Yes... I did that but find it horribly ugly. I had defaultdict call a function that raises a ValueError
@sshashank124 That makes sense! As far as performance goes though, as I understand it, interpreted languages are not as demanding of heavy memory requirements right? Because you only ever store a single instruction of machine code at a time?
14:58
If at least we could do something like
"cabbage".translate(collections.defaultdict(lambda: raise ValueError(), d))
Alas, lambdas don't like it when you try to put a statement inside them, and it's hard to raise an exception without a raise statement.
@Aris94 although if you're really going extra on memory requirements due to instruction code, you've messed up HAHA
@OlivierMelançon define function
@AnttiHaapala Nooo! Too many lines!
looks like "P" palette format is very common for gifs... so I just deleted all gifs sequentially :P
14:59
@OlivierMelançon 1 more.
if img.type == 'GIF'
@sshashank124 haha I believe you. But just trying to understand on a technical level.
That's too many
@OlivierMelançon go back to javascript then ;)
Naa... I love Python too dearly
15:00
no you don't! you just want to change it :D real love is all about accepting all the flaws.
@Aris94 yeah same. can't see a case why it would ever surpass. practically speaking
Python's only flaw is it str.translate function
That and the fact that people do not use metaclass enough
@sshashank124 So you think the main purpose to use an interpreted language over a compiled one is based on how easy it is to write vs performance reasons? The ease of use outweighs the slower performance?
cbg
cbg
@Aris94 that I can think of rn
15:04
Python is compiled... not to binary code though
nothing executes Python code as such. Bash is interpreted.
@AnttiHaapala But it's an interpreted language. Single instruction at a time.
Can you explain?
the Python the language in pretty much all of its implementations is compiled just before execution.
to bytecode at least.
@AnttiHaapala Try running the following file:

def test():
@AnttiHaapala Oh you're saying language is interpreted. But when you run a python script, it is not compiled.
def test():
print(hello)

print("Hello")
15:07
it is compiled, just before it is run
See how it won't error
>>> def foo():
...     print(hello)
where do you think the source code goes?
garbage collected away
@AnttiHaapala The exact definition of compiled means turning high level code into machine code
@Aris94 umm, it does not.
then Java is interpreted?
I was thinking about bytecode this morning. In C#, the language is able to use reflection to inspect the statements inside a LINQ expression (i.e. something like our list comprehensions) at runtime. This is useful e.g. for ORMs, which inspect LINQ queries and convert them into SQL queries. I was wondering whether Python could do anything similar. Inspecting the byte code of a function object and turning it into something else at runtime.
15:09
@AnttiHaapala "a computer program that translates an entire set of instructions written in a higher-level symbolic language (such as C) into machine language before the instructions can be executed " - Merriam-Webster
I suspected it was possible in CPython, but I wasn't clear about whether it would be guaranteed to work in all other implementations.
you can have a typo (non-syntax error) in your code in some function but it won't error until it's run. you will never find that in a compiled language
I'm sorry @AnttiHaapala but you are mistaken
7
@Aris94 that is exactly what happens with CPython and Jython and IronPython and PyPy and so on, except for machine language
We're not talking about CPython
Python...
15:10
time to hand in your license, Antti :D
exposed
A compiler by definition translates the ENTIRE set of instructions to machine code
Please don't unstar, I find that message very funny
I don't mean to sound arrogant. I'm sorry if I do.
Just going on definitions
15:12
Cleb is finding that max(list_o_numlike_stings, key=int) is slower than max(list_o_numlike_strings, key=float) stackoverflow.com/questions/50394183/…
And ideas why?
"what the Python interpreter compiles the source to" :D I like the oxymoron in this
@piRSquared yeah i've been wondering that and trying to find some explanation online.
maybe we could ask them to provide the exact code for their timeit setup
27
Q: Why is float() faster than int()?

halexExperimenting with some code and doing some microbenchmarks I just found out that using the float function on a string containing an integer number is a factor 2 faster than using int on the same string. >>> python -m timeit int('1') 1000000 loops, best of 3: 0.548 usec per loop >>> python -m t...

I can't reproduce that, int is faster on my machine
In [4]: %timeit max(a.split(), key=int)
3.29 µs ± 124 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100000 loops each)

In [5]: %timeit max(a.split(), key=float)
4.01 µs ± 43.8 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100000 loops each)
@Aris94 Being interpreted offers few advantages directly, but indirectly it can lead to many. It's much easier to make interpreted languages dynamic, which, when done well, can increase power, readability, and the ability to make complex abstractions simple to use. These, in turn, can all lead to a much better library ecosystem. Interpreters are also easier to write a REPL for. None of these are absolute (as C# and Swift have shown), but there are connections.
15:14
apparently base is a problem?
try timeit with base explicitly specified
@chrisz are you running Python2 or 3?
I can't replicate the result either with test_list = ' '.join(np.random.randint(0, 500, 100000).astype(str)) P 3.6
@chrisz could you also add in your result with the base specified for the int call
wait can't do that with thsi
@abarnert Thanks for that, makes a lot of sense. What is a REPL?
A Read–Eval–Print Loop (REPL), also known as an interactive toplevel or language shell, is a simple, interactive computer programming environment that takes single user inputs (i.e. single expressions), evaluates them, and returns the result to the user; a program written in a REPL environment is executed piecewise. The term is most usually used to refer to programming interfaces similar to the classic Lisp machine interactive environment. Common examples include command line shells and similar environments for programming languages, and is particularly characteristic of scripting languages. ...
basically interactive shell for any programming language, python, ghci, etc
15:17
@sshashank124 Ah ok Python shell, got it.
That's the one I'm most familiar with anyway
@Aris94 Also, there actually are cases where an interpreted (or at least bytecode-compiled) language will have higher performance. For example, if your code is heavy on threaded contention over some moderately complex data structure, Java probably comes with a highly-tuned lock-free implementation, while C++ doesn't, and you can't even build anything as good that's portable because of the less-well-defined memory model, so you end up using fine-grained locks instead and running 4x as slow.
Is any terminal considered a REPL then?
might have also heard of bash
technically yes, the best kind of correct
Usually the terminal is the program that runs the shell and presents the I/O to the user. But the shell is a REPL for bash, cmd, or some other language.
@sshashank124 Yup, very familiar with linux and mac terminals
15:19
@Aris94 super under the radar little shell called BASH
might not have heard of it
I mix up the terms, but i call them all terminals lol
everyone does
Hi, someone good within PyQt5 and wants to help me out? >.<
it's just pedantic if someone goes, "Um akshually it's a shell not a terminal"
Can I share that I just found in my archives?
15:21
@SLake if it's not about your question that you've just posted on main
@vaultah
it is
@sshashank124 haha i see. So is bash referring specifically to the mac terminal? or unix terminals in general?
Usually you're running a shell in a terminal, and the fact that one of the two is bash rather than zsh is more important than the fact that one of the two is kterm rather than Terminal.app.
@SLake please don't ask for help with recent questions here. See sopython.com/chatroom
@Aris94 terminal is the window/program that displays your shell interactions (ie iTerm2, Terminal, urxvt, etc)
15:22
@sshashank124 oh yes i know, i was asking specifically about bash
@Aris94 shell is the program you interact WITH (bash, csh, zsh, fsh)
I use linux mainly
bash refers to the bash shell. sorry if i'm not understanding your question
@sshashank124 OH ok I understand now
But on Windows, cmd.exe is both a terminal and a shell, and you can run, e.g., the 4NT shell under the cmd terminal, or the cmd shell under the Cmder terminal. Plus, depending on your version of Windows, it might be called something like "DOS prompt" in the GUI. And PowerShell can run in the cmd terminal, or run as its own terminal. Plus, they call terminals "consoles", and "shell" means their equivalent of Finder or Nautilus, not cmd and PowerShell. No wonder everyone's confused.
15:23
terminal is like your monitor and shell is like your actual OS
if that makes sense
wait, why is that a problem? @vaultah
terminal is just a window to interact with the shell
so the window itself is the terminal. And the interface/program you use is bash/csh/zsh...
I see now. Thanks everyone for the clarification
15:25
@Aris94 now you are not mistaken
HAHA
loool
was not supposed to edit that one :D
@sshashank124 wait but wasn't i right about the interpreter stuff?
yeah you were
15:26
@sshashank124 so you're a bicycle then, if someone corrects that you're a programmer, then they're just being pedantic :D
@vaultah it's gold!
i don't mind being a bike
to each my own
:)
@Aris94 and this one was for you unix.stackexchange.com/questions/180943/terminal-vs-bash/… if you didn't catch it yet ;)
@AnttiHaapala yes I read it, thanks for that
@AnttiHaapala no i exaggerate. i was just trying to say that if someone said "My terminal is giving me an error" and it was a bash error, i wouldn't sue them right away
15:28
I recently started reading that Steve Jobs biography so I formed some foundation of early computers and terminals haha
That "Python for Professionals" book… are those the best examples pages they could come up with? I think the "random" chapter seems to be heavily based on the old popular but incorrect SO answer that was the main piece of evidence for why Python should have the secrets module so nobody writes advice like that anymore. And it looks like someone did some editing to trick you into thinking it's up to date, rather than fixing it. Why?
@Aris94 I think this one is a bit better in terms of discussion en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
rb folks
> Whenever you run a Ruby program, Ruby's parser processes the code and turns it into an "abstract syntax tree" (an AST) which can then be either turned into bytecode for YARV (on Ruby 1.9) or be interpreted immediately (as with Ruby 1.8).
@sshashank124 If you want to get really pedantic, that's when you start telling people that actually, iTerm2/kterm/whatever isn't a terminal, it's a terminal emulator, and your laptop is effectively its own terminal.
@AnttiHaapala In what sense does "pre-1.9" count as "usually"?
15:34
@abarnert deleted :D who knows, I don't ruby.
@AnttiHaapala I'm not sure how this comes into play. Python is listed under the interpreted languages, not byte code compiled.
IIRC, Ruby 1.9 was their equivalent to Python 3.0, at around the same time.
@Aris94 the point is that Python programs are compiled to bytecode before running them, have been since Python pre-1.0
ruby 1.8 programs weren't compiled to any other representation, they were just parsed and evaluated from that.
Python even has an optimizer that can change the generated bytecode from the apparent one.
Anyone have any idea how I can create a simple loading page in Django using Javascript/AJAX? I've read all the SO threads and haven't found anything (plus, created my own to no avail). Right now I've got something like:

One view renders an HTML file which contains a <script> that runs another view.
This feels kind of hacky, and I'm still not sure how to get info from the latter view, because the view itself does a lot of processing, so it's not like javascript can update anything while it's running
so the interpreted <=> compiled is a continuum. However, CPython that runs the programs also has the compiler built in. With Java, the java executable doesn't even come with the compiler
15:41
@AnttiHaapala This is diving in a bit too deep isn't it? I believe that Python is turned into Bytecode, but calling Python a Compiled language is misleading as it implies that the entire program is compiled before execution.
I get your point, but it does not make Python a "Compiled Language"
Otherwise you wouldn't stop "compiling" after hitting your first error.
hmm? what do you mean by that?
Yes, having the compiler built in is a very big deal. Smalltalk used to make a big deal out of that, but managers came away thinking that it means you can’t use a GUI program written in Smalltalk unless you’re a programmer.
that's just a convenience feature in "recent" compilers that they continue to produce (often garbage errors) after the first one...
@Aris94 your modules are compiled before being executed. Possibly in advance, possibly at import time, but either way, before any of their code gets run. It’s only top-level scripts and REPL input that gets compiled and interpreted one statement at a time.
no, the top-level script is also compiled as one piece but the pyc is not saved.
interpreter compiles each statement with the single mode
15:45
@abarnert See but that's the thing. When you say "one statement at a time" that kind of contradicts compilation.
An interpreter is defined as "a computer program that executes each of a set of high-level instructions before going to the next instruction"
@Aris94 in Java 9 there is now java shell, it compiles one statement at a time
something something JIT
So maybe you can argue that Python is BOTH an interpreted and a compiled language?
15:46
Or is a JIT compiler also not a compiler?
I guess definitions are constantly changing as technology advances.
@AndrasDeak I'm not familiar with Java under the hood
5 mins ago, by Antti Haapala
so the interpreted <=> compiled is a continuum. However, CPython that runs the programs also has the compiler built in. With Java, the java executable doesn't even come with the compiler
@Aris94 The point is that modules aren’t compiled and interpreted that way. And most of the code in most things you’d call an “application” is in modules.
@Aris94 me neither
@AnttiHaapala When you say compiled one statement at a time, do you also mean executed one at a time?
Because for a language to be considered interpreted, it must be executed one statement at a time
15:48
>>> print('hello')
hello
>>> print('world')
world
let's argue whether python is pass-by-reference. Go!
@AndrasDeak Python is pass-by-reference. Here, I said it. Q.E.D.
DSM
DSM
Today is turning into a day I'm glad I'm drowning in work. ;-)
@AnttiHaapala boo
@Aris94 ^there you have it, when I hit enter, print('hello') is compiled into python bytecode and then that bytecode is executed.
15:49
@abarnert I don't see how modules change anything. When you import it's as if you are copy and pasting that module at the top of your script, right? So each statement in you module would just be executed right before the code you wrote.
>>> import dis
>>> dis.dis("print('hello')")
  1           0 LOAD_NAME                0 (print)
              2 LOAD_CONST               0 ('hello')
              4 CALL_FUNCTION            1
              6 RETURN_VALUE
Meanwhile, the output the CPython compiler generates is interpreted one bytecode at a time by the CPython interpreter’s ceval loop, to make things even more fun.
this is the disassembled bytecode for that one line
@Aris94 "copy and pasting that module at the top of your script" nooo
@abarnert or one can use things like psyco to JIT-compile it :P
15:51
@AnttiHaapala I don't think bytecode was ever part of the debate. It's whether or not it justifies labeling python as a "compiled language"
I never doubted that bytecode is produced
notice that I said there that Python is compiled... not to binary code though ;)
@AnttiHaapala Not if you want to run on 64-bit, or Python 3… But then you can use numba.jit. Or use PyPy (or Jython or Iron) instead of CPython. So, yeah.
is there anyone who knows anything about django here
@AnttiHaapala However you put it, Python will still remain an "Interpreted Language." As I said before, you can try to argue that it is ALSO a "Compiled Language." However, the definition of a Compiled Language, is one that has its code run through a compiler. And a compiler is defined as "a computer program that translates an entire set of instructions written in a higher-level symbolic language (such as C) into machine language before the instructions can be executed "
@Aris94 oh yeah that too, Jython compiles to Java class files so then it is as compiled as Java there, right ;)
15:54
@Aris94 When you import a module, it’s as if you created an object that contains its own namespace built from that modules’s compiled code, and put a reference to that object at the top of your script. It’s very different from copying and pasting the source into your script. For the most obvious demonstration, you can import a pyc file without the py even being on your computer—or import an extension module whose source isn’t even in Python.
@AnttiHaapala Any alternate versions of Python are obviously irrelevant in this context.
@Aris94 I don't like that definition since it would exclude javac from being a compiler though ;)
But Jython is NOT python lol.. It's not an opinion, that's just a fact. That's why it's called Jython
Is PyPy Python?
@abarnert Ok I believe that. But that still isn't relevant in determining whether or not Python is compiled..
@vaultah I don't understand the need to bring in all these Python spin-offs. It just complicates the debate for no good reason.
When you say Python, it is understood that one is referring to the regular Python language lol.
Either 2 or 3
15:59
@AnttiHaapala Tefhnically, bytecode is “binary”. It’s non-textual, non-human-readable, meant to be run by a machine. It’s just that the machine is a CPython VM rather than an x86_64. And really, x86_64 only runs the output of a C compiler by translating it to microcode and JITing the result, even if much of the code for its interpreter is compiled to hardware instead of to software.
@abarnert oops :D

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