On 17/05/17 01:41, bartc wrote:
On 17/05/2017 00:24, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Wed, May 17, 2017 at 9:01 AM, bartc <b...@freeuk.com> wrote:

You mean like wheel files? Yeah, whodathunk. They don't need a C
compiler or anything.

I don't know if that's the same kind of thing. I'm not talking about
something like a binary distribution or something that self-installs.

I mean distributing actual source that needs to be built (so independent
of platform or compiler), but without having to download a sprawling
directory structure with thousands of files simply because that's the
layout needed during development. It's sort of in-between the
developer's sources, and a binary executable.

As a cross-platform developer, I find your naivity refreshing. If only life were so simple.

When you develop code yourself, you can lay out your files however you find most convenient, code to the foibles of your compiler, operating system and indeed processor, and use whatever tools you choose. The moment you expect anyone else to compile your code, all of those conveniences go out of the window, and things become more complex, not less. Arbitrary compilation environments require more support than development, not less.

What do you mean what /I/ support?

Your programs. Anything you release. On how many of those combinations
do they work?

I'm not talking about my programs for a change. (I mentioned my compiler
as an example of one that is faster than tcc but not as fast as gcc.)

You should be. You are claiming something is easy. Chris invited you to consider how easy it isn't for code you know well. That you keep fighting shy of doing so does not speak well of you as a programmer.

It should be a piece of cake, yes?


Well, let's see. What C standard does TCC support? What standard
library does it provide? If it supports all of C99 and links against
(say) GNU libc, then it's probably going to be fairly straight-forward
to compile CPython. If it supports C99 but has its own libc, you might
have to detect features to find out what you can and can't do with
it... yaknow, how the configure script does. That's what it's for. And
if TCC doesn't support C99, you may have major hassles.

OK. Now you understand what I meant that trying to compile CPython [with
TCC] was complicated, in order to get an idea of what performance would
be like.

Yes, it's complicated. That's the point: it *is* complicated. You seem to think that it's been made complicated for you. It hasn't. The hard work you had to put in to compile with TCC had to be put in by other people for gcc, clang, MSVC, etc. That no one else put in the work for TCC just indicates that no one else thought it was worth while.

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