a claimless python to c++ converter
Project description
======= Pythran =======
What is it?
Pythran is a python to c++ compiler for a subset of the python language. It takes a python module annotated with a few interface description and turns it into a native python module with the same interface, but (hopefully) faster.
Installation
Gather dependencies:
Following the easy install way:
$> PYTHONPATH=<my_prefix>/lib/python<my_version>/site-packages \ easy_install --prefix=<my_prefix> ply networkx $> sudo apt-get install libboost-python-dev
Following the debian way:
$> sudo apt-get install libboost-python-dev python-ply python-networkx
Use the install target from setup script, in source driectory:
$> python setup.py install --prefix=<my_prefix>
Write your environment in stone:
$> export PYTHONPATH=<my_prefix>/lib/python<my_version>/site-packages $> export PATH=<my_prefix>/bin:$PATH
Basic Usage
A simple pythran input could be dprod.py:
#pythran export dprod(int list, int list) def dprod(l0,l1): return sum([x*y for x,y in zip(l0,l1)])
To turn it into a native module, run:
$> pythran dprod.py
That will generate a native dprod.so that can be imported just like the former module.
Documentation
The user documentation is available in the MANUAL file.
The CLI documentation is available from the pythran help command:
$> pythran --help
The developper documentation is also available using pydoc. Beware, this is the computer science incarnation fo the famous Where’s Wally? game:
$> pydoc pythran $> pydoc pythran.typing
License
See LICENSE file.
Contact
Praise, flame and cookies:
#pythran on FreeNode
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