codon
mypyc
Our great sponsors
codon | mypyc | |
---|---|---|
34 | 25 | |
13,819 | 1,667 | |
1.0% | 1.3% | |
7.9 | 0.0 | |
19 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
C++ | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
codon
-
Should I Open Source my Company?
https://github.com/exaloop/codon/blob/develop/LICENSE
Here are some others: https://github.com/search?q=%22Business+Source+License%22+%2...
-
Python running on the Dart VM?
I found at least one project that managed to compile python AOT to LLVM https://github.com/exaloop/codon. Even if LLVM is more expressive than Dart Kernel, that should at least be some evidence that this might not be too impractical.
-
Codon: Python Compiler
Their fannkuch benchmark seems to be a bit dishonest. They claim an enormous perf delta on https://exaloop.io/benchmarks.html but fannkuch uses factorial a lot and they define factorial with a very small (n=20) table: https://github.com/exaloop/codon/blob/fb461371613049539654c1...
Disclaimer: I've worked on several Python runtimes and compilers, but I'm not by any means out to get Codon. Just happened across this by accident while looking at their inline LLVM, which is neat.
-
The father of Swift made another baby: Mojo: looks to be based on Python using MLIR
If you literally want Python, but compiled ... Look at Codon: https://github.com/exaloop/codon
-
Mojo – a new programming language for all AI developers
Another "Python with high-performance compiled builds" would be https://github.com/exaloop/codon.
-
MIT Turbocharges Python’s Notoriously Slow Compiler
This is the project being discussed: https://github.com/exaloop/codon
-
Is there a way to use turn a project into a single executable file that doesn't require anyone to do anything like install Python before using it?
Try Codon? https://github.com/exaloop/codon
- Since when did Python haters spread out everywhere? Maybe DNF5 would be faster because of ditched it, maybe.
-
Budget HomeLab converted to endless money-pit
https://github.com/exaloop/codon might save you from the rewrite.
- What are your thoughts on Codon compiler having a paid licence?
mypyc
- Making use of type hints
-
Writing Python like it's Rust
That would be interesting! You might already be aware. But there's mypyc[0], which is an AOT compiler for Python code with type hints (that, IIRC, mypy uses to compile itself into a native extension).
Wanted to give you a head-start on the lit-review for your students I guess :)
[0] https://github.com/mypyc/mypyc
-
The different uses of Python type hints
https://github.com/mypyc/mypyc
> Mypyc compiles Python modules to C extensions. It uses standard Python type hints to generate fast code. Mypyc uses mypy to perform type checking and type inference.
> Mypyc can compile anything from one module to an entire codebase. The mypy project has been using mypyc to compile mypy since 2019, giving it a 4x performance boost over regular Python.
I have not experience a 4x boost, rather between 1.5x and 2x. I guess it depends on the code.
-
The Python Paradox
Funny how emergence works with tools. Give a language too few tools but viral circumstances - the ecosystem diverges (Lisps, Javascript). Give it too long an iteration time but killer guarantees, you end up with committees. Python not falling into either of these traps should be understood as nothing short of magic in emergence.
I only recently discovered that python's reference typechecker, mypy, has a small side project for typed python to emit C [1], written entirely in python. Nowadays with python's rich specializer ecosystem (LLVM, CUDA, and just generally vectorized math), the value of writing a small program in anything else diminishes quickly.
Imagine reading the C++wg release notes in the same mood that you would the python release notes.
[1] https://github.com/mypyc/mypyc
-
Codon: A high-performance Python compiler
> Note that the mypyc issue tracker lives in this repository! Please don't file mypyc issues in the mypy issue tracker.
See https://github.com/mypyc/mypyc/blob/master/show_me_the_code....
-
ELI5: Can’t one write a compiler for Python and make everything go brrrr?
And mypyc https://github.com/mypyc/mypyc
-
Is it time for Python to have a statically-typed, compiled, fast superset?
More recent approaches include mypyc which is (on the tin) quite close to what you describe, and taichi that lives in between.
-
Pholyglot version 0.0.0 (PHP to PHP+C polyglot transpiler)
Have you encountered mypyc?
-
Python 3.11 is 25% faster than 3.10 on average
https://github.com/mypyc/mypyc
> Mypyc compiles Python modules to C extensions. It uses standard Python type hints to generate fast code. Mypyc uses mypy to perform type checking and type inference.
-
Comparing implementations of the Monkey language VIII: The Spectacular Interpreted Special (Ruby, Python and Lua)
Regarding the large execution time mentioned in your article, I discovered (mypyc)[https://github.com/mypyc/mypyc] on this subreddit in a post from the black formatter team https://www.reddit.com/r/Python/comments/v2009i/im_that_person_who_got_black_compiled_with_mypyc/?utm_medium=android_app&utm_source=share
What are some alternatives?
Nuitka - Nuitka is a Python compiler written in Python. It's fully compatible with Python 2.6, 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, and 3.11. You feed it your Python app, it does a lot of clever things, and spits out an executable or extension module.
Cython - The most widely used Python to C compiler
Numba - NumPy aware dynamic Python compiler using LLVM
mypy - Optional static typing for Python
beartype - Unbearably fast near-real-time hybrid runtime-static type-checking in pure Python.
taichi - Productive, portable, and performant GPU programming in Python.
CPython - The Python programming language
julia - The Julia Programming Language
pex - A tool for generating .pex (Python EXecutable) files, lock files and venvs.
Nim - Nim is a statically typed compiled systems programming language. It combines successful concepts from mature languages like Python, Ada and Modula. Its design focuses on efficiency, expressiveness, and elegance (in that order of priority).
pyccel - Python extension language using accelerators