py2many
prometeo
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py2many | prometeo | |
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29 | 10 | |
590 | 610 | |
2.2% | - | |
8.1 | 0.0 | |
17 days ago | almost 2 years ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License |
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py2many
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Transpiler, a Meaningless Word
> Another problem is that there are hundreds of built-in library functions that need to be compiled from Python from C
An approach I've advocated as one of the main authors of py2many is that all of the python builtin functions be written in a subset of python[1] and then compiled into native code. This has the benefit of avoiding GIL, problems with C-API among other things.
Do checkout the examples here[2] which work out of the box for many of the 8-9 supported backends.
[1] https://github.com/py2many/py2many/blob/main/doc/langspec.md
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py2many VS kithon - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 17 Jun 2023
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Why I'm still using Python
https://github.com/py2many/py2many/blob/main/doc/langspec.md
Reimplement a large enough, commonly used subset of python stdlib using this dialect and we may be in the business of writing cross platform apps (perhaps start with android and Ubuntu/Gnome)
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Codon: A high-performance Python compiler
For py2many, there is an informal specification here:
https://github.com/py2many/py2many/blob/main/doc/langspec.md
Would be great if all the authors of "python-like" languages get together and come up with a couple of specs.
I say a couple, because there are ones that support the python runtime (such as cython) and the ones which don't (like py2many).
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A Python-compatible statically typed language erg-lang/erg
It'd not fully solve your issue, but have you ever seen https://github.com/py2many/py2many ?
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Omyyyy/pycom: A Python compiler, down to native code, using C++
Cython doesn't consume python3 type hints and needs special type hints of its own. But it's certainly more mature than other players in the field.
What we need is a rpython suitable for app programming and a stdlib written in that dialect.
https://github.com/py2many/py2many/blob/main/doc/langspec.md
- I made a Python compiler, that can compile Python source down to fast, standalone executables.
- PyTorch: Where we are headed and why it looks a lot like Julia (but not exactly)
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Show HN: prometeo – a Python-to-C transpiler for high-performance computing
No intermediate AST. To understand the various stages of transpilation and separation of language specific and independent rewriters, this file is a good starting point:
https://github.com/adsharma/py2many/blob/main/py2many/cli.py...
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Implicit Overflow Considered Harmful (and how to fix it)
Link to the test that's relevant for this discussion:
https://github.com/adsharma/py2many/blob/main/tests/cases/in...
This is an explicit deviation from python's bigint, which doesn't map very well to systemsey languages. The next logical step is to build on this to have dependent and refinement types.
Work in progress here:
prometeo
- Are there any libraries that can easily convert Python to C/C#/or C++? Ones where a person doesn't have to "calibrate" it, just, pip install library and then they can have their Python code in C,C#,or C++?
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I made a Python compiler, that can compile Python source down to fast, standalone executables.
Honest question: How does pycom compare to similar tools like Nuitka, prometeo, or mypyc?
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Profiling and Analyzing Performance of Python Programs
If you don't mind switching to a little different syntax of Python, then you also might want to take a look at prometeo - an embedded domain specific language based on Python, specifically aimed at scientific computing. Prometeo programs transpile to pure C code and its performance can be comparable with hand-written C code.
- GitHub - zanellia/prometeo: An experimental Python-to-C transpiler and domain specific language for embedded high-performance computing
- Show HN: Prometeo – a Python-to-C transpiler for high-performance computing
- An experimental Python-to-C transpiler and domain specific language for embedded high-performance computing
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Show HN: prometeo – a Python-to-C transpiler for high-performance computing
This is awesome! The direction of using a subset of python, while leveraging the user base and static typing to accomplish some other everyday task in a different language is very legit IMO.
I took a cursory look at:
https://github.com/zanellia/prometeo/blob/master/prometeo/cg...
It seems quite similar in spirit to
https://github.com/adsharma/py2many/blob/main/pyrs/transpile...
I'm not spending much time on py2many last few months (started a new job). Let me know if any of it sounds useful - especially the ability to transpile to 7-8 languages including Julia, C++ and Rust.
What are some alternatives?
pybind11 - Seamless operability between C++11 and Python
Octavian.jl - Multi-threaded BLAS-like library that provides pure Julia matrix multiplication
PyO3 - Rust bindings for the Python interpreter
llvm-cbe - resurrected LLVM "C Backend", with improvements
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.
StaticCompiler.jl - Compiles Julia code to a standalone library (experimental)
PyCall.jl - Package to call Python functions from the Julia language
acados - Fast and embedded solvers for nonlinear optimal control
julia - The Julia Programming Language
textX - Domain-Specific Languages and parsers in Python made easy http://textx.github.io/textX/
rust-numpy - PyO3-based Rust bindings of the NumPy C-API
MatrixEquations.jl - Solution of Lyapunov, Sylvester and Riccati matrix equations using Julia