Well, not exactly. Mixing Python with C/C++ extends the "coverage" that
you can do with Python.

Andreas


Am Montag, den 24.03.2008, 23:39 -0700 schrieb Tony Cappellini:
> Another alternative is Weave
> http://www.scipy.org/Weave
> 
> But mixing C/C++ with Python sort of defeats the reasons for using
> Python to begin with
> 
> Message: 2
> Date: Sat, 22 Mar 2008 02:44:54 +0100
> From: Eike Welk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: [Tutor] Python to C++
> To: tutor@python.org
> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
> 
> On Friday 21 March 2008 23:37, Dinesh B Vadhia wrote:
> > Thank-you for all the suggestions for converting to C/C++ which
> > will be followed up.
> >
> > Can we interface Python to a C++ library and if so how?
> >
> > Dinesh
> >
> 
> If you have only few classes / member functions Boost-Python is a good
> solution.
> http://www.boost.org/libs/python/doc/
> 
> I heard that SWIG can also generate glue code for C++.
> http://www.swig.org/Doc1.3/SWIGPlus.html
> 
> You could also look at Py-QT they have a tool like SWIG (SIP I think),
> which they use to generate the glue code for the fairly big QT
> library. Maybe you like it better.
> http://www.riverbankcomputing.co.uk/pyqt/
> _______________________________________________
> Tutor maillist  -  Tutor@python.org
> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor

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