Iron python
mypy
Iron python | mypy | |
---|---|---|
34 | 112 | |
1,062 | 17,541 | |
0.1% | 0.7% | |
3.7 | 9.7 | |
3 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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.
Iron python
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Python 3.13 Gets a JIT
If you're interested in learning more about the challenges and tradeoffs, both Jython (https://www.jython.org/) and IronPython (https://ironpython.net/) have been around for a long time and there's a lot of reading material on that subject.
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How python's Multithreading differs from other languages
There are several ways of bypassing the GIL. First of all, the GIL is only present in the C implementation of Python, CPython. Other implementations of Python like Jython, IronPython, and PyPy don't have the GIL. Additionally, Python provides the multiprocessing library, which allows for parallelism in your Python program.
- Spot the thing that does Not belong
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Starting Python, confused about cross platform app development. Is IronPython + .NET the only option?
I am not set on .NET, but just curious, so thanks for the suggestions. Interesting that it's billed as cross-plaform, but doesn't do it that well. I just searched 'python wrapper for .net' and found PythonNET. Also, it seems yes IronPython is active.
- (C++) Intel MKL ou Eigen pra trabalhar com álgebra linear em grandes data sets?
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How to use a language other than TypeScript?
You mean like this?
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ironpython install
In that case, I think it's enough if you go here, then download and install the MSI file: https://github.com/IronLanguages/ironpython2/releases/tag/ipy-2.7.12
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Scripting inside Rimworld with Unity: Impossible? With java it is a 3 liner.
There are quite a lot of ways to run scripting languages in C#. I've no idea what JSR223 is but .NET has DLR for example. There are also multiple libraries: IronPython, NLua, Jint and Jurassic for Javascript. There's also older version of CS-Script working with .NET Framework.
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Javathon does not exists and cannot hurt you
But does it Microsoft python https://ironpython.net
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Execute Python script from .Net Core API backend
If you need control over how the script runs, access to variables etc, I can highly recommend IronPython, but it might be overkill for what you need.
mypy
- The GIL can now be disabled in Python's main branch
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Polars – A bird's eye view of Polars
It's got type annotations and mypy has a discussion about it here as well: https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/1282
- Static Typing for Python
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Python 3.13 Gets a JIT
There is already an AOT compiler for Python: Nuitka[0]. But I don't think it's much faster.
And then there is mypyc[1] which uses mypy's static type annotations but is only slightly faster.
And various other compilers like Numba and Cython that work with specialized dialects of Python to achieve better results, but then it's not quite Python anymore.
[0] https://nuitka.net/
[1] https://github.com/python/mypy/tree/master/mypyc
- Introducing Flask-Muck: How To Build a Comprehensive Flask REST API in 5 Minutes
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WeveAllBeenThere
In Python there is MyPy that can help with this. https://www.mypy-lang.org/
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It's Time for a Change: Datetime.utcnow() Is Now Deprecated
It's funny you should say this.
Reading this article prompted me to future-proof a program I maintain for fun that deals with time; it had one use of utcnow, which I fixed.
And then I tripped over a runtime type problem in an unrelated area of the code, despite the code being green under "mypy --strict". (and "100% coverage" from tests, except this particular exception only occured in a "# pragma: no-cover" codepath so it wasn't actually covered)
It turns out that because of some core decisions about how datetime objects work, `datetime.date.today() < datetime.datetime.now()` type-checks but gives a TypeError at runtime. Oops. (cause discussed at length in https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/9015 but without action for 3 years)
One solution is apparently to use `datetype` for type annotations (while continuing to use `datetime` objects at runtime): https://github.com/glyph/DateType
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What's New in Python 3.12
PEP 695 is great. I've been using mypy every day at work in last couple years or so with very strict parameters (no any type etc) and I have experience writing real life programs with Rust, Agda, and some Haskell before, so I'm familiar with strict type systems. I'm sure many will disagree with me but these are my very honest opinions as a professional who uses Python types every day:
* Some types are better than no types. I love Python types, and I consider them required. Even if they're not type-checked they're better than no types. If they're type-checked it's even better. If things are typed properly (no any etc) and type-checked that's even better. And so on...
* Having said this, Python's type system as checked by mypy feels like a toy type system. It's very easy to fool it, and you need to be careful so that type-checking actually fails badly formed programs.
* The biggest issue I face are exceptions. Community discussed this many times [1] [2] and the overall consensus is to not check exceptions. I personally disagree as if you have a Python program that's meticulously typed and type-checked exceptions still cause bad states and since Python code uses exceptions liberally, it's pretty easy to accidentally go to a bad state. E.g. in the linked github issue JukkaL (developer) claims checking things like "KeyError" will create too many false positives, I strongly disagree. If a function can realistically raise a "KeyError" the program should be properly written to accept this at some level otherwise something that returns type T but 0.01% of the time raises "KeyError" should actually be typed "Raises[T, KeyError]".
* PEP 695 will help because typing things particularly is very helpful. Often you want to pass bunch of Ts around but since this is impractical some devs resort to passing "dict[str, Any]"s around and thus things type-check but you still get "KeyError" left and right. It's better to have "SomeStructure[T]" types with "T" as your custom data type (whether dataclass, or pydantic, or traditional class) so that type system has more opportunities to reject bad programs.
* Overall, I'm personally very optimistic about the future of types in Python!
[1] https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/1773
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Mypy 1.6 Released
# is fixed: https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/12987.
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Ask HN: Why are all of the best back end web frameworks dynamically typed?
You probably already know but you can add type hints and then check for consistency with https://github.com/python/mypy in python.
Modern Python with things like https://learnpython.com/blog/python-match-case-statement/ + mypy + Ruff for linting https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff can get pretty good results.
I found typed dataclasses (https://docs.python.org/3/library/dataclasses.html) in python using mypy to give me really high confidence when building data representations.
What are some alternatives?
PythonNet - Python for .NET is a package that gives Python programmers nearly seamless integration with the .NET Common Language Runtime (CLR) and provides a powerful application scripting tool for .NET developers.
pyright - Static Type Checker for Python
PeachPie - PeachPie - the PHP compiler and runtime for .NET and .NET Core
ruff - An extremely fast Python linter and code formatter, written in Rust.
P - The P programming language.
pyre-check - Performant type-checking for python.
Hybridizer - Examples of C# code compiled to GPU by hybridizer
black - The uncompromising Python code formatter
Mond - A scripting language for .NET Core
pytype - A static type analyzer for Python code
Amplifier.NET - Amplifier allows .NET developers to easily run complex applications with intensive mathematical computation on Intel CPU/GPU, NVIDIA, AMD without writing any additional C kernel code. Write your function in .NET and Amplifier will take care of running it on your favorite hardware.
pydantic - Data validation using Python type hints