@OakDev I'm curious, why do you keep posting stuff that you ask to be removed. I don't get it. Are you a bot? If not, just type your message into the chat box and then ctrl-a, delete. If you are a bot what is 1.1 + 2.2?
Full disclosure, I think "the reader" here means "anybody who maintains a Python implementation", which in principle also includes the CPython devs. So I can't use that specific sentence to claim that CPython has no type-hint-based performance improvements
And there's Cython, a language that contains both Python and C-like syntax. Not an official PSF project or anything, but the name is often confused with CPython
So I was wondering I've seen some packages that don't look very maintained or popular but I was curious to see if there's anyway to use dynamic models in Django
Basically in SQL when you create a Table your rows must adhere to the columns per that Table
But what I'm wondering is if there's a way to add a column during run time
It's an implementation of python. Just like pypy is another. essentially you can think of them as competitors, or allies depending on how you want to think of it i suppose. But they're both meant for the same task: allowing us to actually run python by doing all the hard work. That's all i meant by it when i said they're similar
I've never understood the phrase "comparing apples and oranges". It's quite easy to compare them. They're both fruits, they're brightly colored, they can be processed into a tasty juice...
cpython and pypy are similar in regard to being runtimes - and cython and rpython are similar in being offshoots of the python language that can be compiled to native code
i tried out cython the other day and was able to very easily compile one of my modules to native code
@AmagicalFishy type hints are accepted by a number of Python'like compilers, namely Cython and MyPyC. So if you have a type hinted program, going to full compilation becomes easier.
If the intent is "they can be compared, but there's never a practical reason to do so", that feels like a failure of imagination to me. Maybe you're trying to decide what to have for breakfast. Maybe you want to plant the most profitable fruit orchard.
yes ... for instance rpython is the python language, but to have it compile into more efficient code, you avoid patterns that confuse the compiler's efforts to infer the types of variables
you are probably right. i thought though that maybe rpython allowed ambiguous patterns where the compiler can't infer the type... it just didn't compile to efficient code
at least in the function signatures and other code that calls functions.. the type has to be clear, but inside functions you can do what you want with the variables
@Todd Hm, I've only read about their inference for visible names, i.e. globals and attributes. For non-closure locals, SSA would allow assigning concrete types even if the variable itself uses several types, I guess.
@Todd funny, I had the exact opposite experience with PyPy and Cython in the past. PyPy just worked, whereas Cython needed a lot of annotating and refactoring to get significant benefits.
@MisterMiyagi see, we don't talk about having noticeable benefits, and just assume its Cython so it must be faster. Life's much easier if you do it that way :P
my usage of cython is pretty basic. I don't need to call any of my code from C, so I don't need to define the function signatures in cython code. I just load my module and call a function in it to run it.
I'm not sure if this is the right place to ask. But I'm just checking if someone would be able to lend me a hand trying to figure out why my decryption-program doesn't work properly
I'm new to Python and currently strugeling pretty bad with
I'd like to know if there's any way I could help somehow regarding this coronavirus outbreak. Please let me know if there's any way you know of that I can help as data analyst/scientist. Cheers!
Oh, you mean help with the outbreak. I don't think you can. Stay home when you're sick, wash your hands. There, you've done all you can to help everyone around you.
Does anyone else spend time trying to write a really good answer, then put it down feeling like maybe people will think I'm preachy, didactic, arrogant, too wordy, condescending, etc?