On Fri, Aug 19, 2016 at 12:32 PM, Jason Newton <nev...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On Fri, Aug 19, 2016 at 3:19 PM, William Stein <wst...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> On Fri, Aug 19, 2016 at 8:19 AM, Jason Newton <nev...@gmail.com> wrote: >> > You must realize that almost any other python driven way to compile >> > c-code >> > in the spirit these projects do is deprecated/dead. Cython has absorbed >> > all >> > the reputation and users that didn't go to pure-c/boost.python - >> > pybind11 is >> > the new kid on the block there so I'm not including it (I'm of the >> > opinion >> > that SWIG users stayed unchanged). Community belief/QA/designers/google >> > all >> > think of Cython first. Weave has effectively closed up it's doors [...] >> >> May I ask why "any other python driven way to compile c-code in the >> spirit these projects do is deprecated/dead?" I'm curious since >> when I started Sage (and Cython based on forking Pyrex), it was >> because none of the other approaches seemed like they would work for >> the developer base I envisioned growing for Sage. That was a long >> time ago, and I'm always pleasantly surprised that Cython has become >> very popular. However, I didn't realize the other approaches were >> deprecated/dead. > > > PyInline's last news update was in 2004 where the author gives a "Hats of[f] > to PyRex", prior to that only a few blog entries in 2001/2002, I've not come > across any project using it but maybe that is not sufficient to call it > deprecated/dead? Does it work with Python 3? > http://pyinline.sourceforge.net/ > > Pyrex no longer has a userbase. Last ML post was 2014. > > Weave only supports python2, got ripped out of Scipy and also directs to > check out Cython and strongly implies the project is all but > dead/maintenance mode: https://github.com/scipy/weave > > Did I miss any of the python driven ways?
Pybindgen? And of course there's ctypes/cffi. I could have sworn I saw another project pop up several years ago that was a lot like what you're suggesting, e.g. a listing of def foo(a, b): [c code using a and b] I don't recall how the types for a and b were declared/converted, and I don't think it did much non-trivial stuff yet, but I can't find a trace of it now (but it's hard to search for laking a name). _______________________________________________ cython-devel mailing list cython-devel@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/cython-devel