Dan Stromberg wrote:
> SIP's approach of using something close to, but not identical to, the .h's
> sounds like it might be pretty productive - especially if the derivative
> of the .h's could be automatically derived using a python script, with
> minor
> tweaks to the inputs on .h upgrades. But
stefan brunthaler, 02.09.2011 06:37:
as promised, I created a publicly available preview of an
implementation with my optimizations, which is available under the
following location:
https://bitbucket.org/py3_pio/preview/wiki/Home
I followed Nick's advice and added some valuable advice and
overvi
> as promised, I created a publicly available preview of an
> implementation with my optimizations, which is available under the
> following location:
> https://bitbucket.org/py3_pio/preview/wiki/Home
>
One very important thing that I forgot was to indicate that you have
to use computed gotos (i.e.
> 1) The SFC optimisation is purely based on static code analysis, right? I
> assume it takes loops into account (and just multiplies scores for inner
> loops)? Is that what you mean with "nesting level"? Obviously, static
> analysis can sometimes be misleading, e.g. when there's a rare special cas
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A single instance of buildbot in the OpenIndiana buildbot is eating
1.4GB of RAM and 3.8GB of SWAP and growing.
The build hangs or die with a "out of memory" error, eventually.
This is 100% reproducible. Everytime I force a build thru the buildbot
co
ACTIVITY SUMMARY (2011-08-26 - 2011-09-02)
Python tracker at http://bugs.python.org/
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Issues counts and deltas:
open2967 ( +4)
closed 21701 (+36)
total 24668 (+40)
Open issues wit
On Sep 1, 2011, at 9:30 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> Antoine Pitrou wrote:
>> Le jeudi 01 septembre 2011 à 08:45 -0700, Guido van Rossum a écrit :
>>> This is definitely thought of as a separate
>>> mark added to the e; ë is not a new letter. I have a feeling it's the same
>>> way for the French
stefan brunthaler, 02.09.2011 17:55:
4) Regarding inlined object references, I would expect that it's much more
worthwhile to speed up LOAD_GLOBAL and LOAD_NAME than LOAD_CONST. I guess
that this would be best helped by watching the module dict and the builtin
dict internally and invalidating the
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On 02/09/11 17:57, Jesus Cea wrote:
> The build hangs or die with a "out of memory" error, eventually.
A simple "make test" with python not compiled with "pydebug" and
skipping all the optional tests (like zip64) is taking up to 300MB of
RAM. Python 2
On Fri, 02 Sep 2011 19:53:37 +0200
Jesus Cea wrote:
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>
> On 02/09/11 17:57, Jesus Cea wrote:
> > The build hangs or die with a "out of memory" error, eventually.
>
> A simple "make test" with python not compiled with "pydebug" and
> skipping all t
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On 09/01/2011 11:59 PM, Stephen J. Turnbull wrote:
> Tres Seaver writes:
>
>> FWIW, I was taught that Spanish had 30 letters in the alfabeto:
>> the 'ñ', plus 'ch', 'll', and 'rr' were all considered distinct
>> characters.
>
> That was always a Cast
>
> For a comparative real world benchmark I tested Martin von Loewis'
> django port (there are not that many meaningful Python 3 real world
> benchmarks) and got a speedup of 1.3 (without IIS). This is reasonably
> well, US got a speedup of 1.35 on this benchmark. I just checked that
> pypy-c-late
Maciej Fijalkowski, 02.09.2011 20:42:
For a comparative real world benchmark I tested Martin von Loewis'
django port (there are not that many meaningful Python 3 real world
benchmarks) and got a speedup of 1.3 (without IIS). This is reasonably
well, US got a speedup of 1.35 on this benchmark. I j
On Fri, Sep 2, 2011 at 9:20 PM, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> Maciej Fijalkowski, 02.09.2011 20:42:
>>>
>>> For a comparative real world benchmark I tested Martin von Loewis'
>>> django port (there are not that many meaningful Python 3 real world
>>> benchmarks) and got a speedup of 1.3 (without IIS). Th
Terry Reedy wrote:
While it has apparently been criticized as 'conservative' (which is well
ought to be), it has been rather progressive in promoting changes such
as 'ph' to 'f' (fisica, fone) and dropping silent 'p' in leading 'psi'
(sicologia) and silent 's' in leading 'sci' (ciencia).
I f
Greg Ewing writes:
> I find it curious that pronunciation always seems to take
> precedence over spelling in campaigns like this. Nowadays,
> especially with the internet increasingly taking over from
> personal interaction, we probably see words written a lot
> more often than we hear them s
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