pybind11
xeus-cling
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pybind11 | xeus-cling | |
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42 | 15 | |
14,741 | 2,945 | |
1.7% | 1.8% | |
8.7 | 4.6 | |
4 days ago | 8 days ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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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.
pybind11
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Experience using crow as web server
I'm investigating using C++ to build a REST server, and would love to know of people's experiences with Crow-- or whether they would recommend something else as a "medium-level" abstraction C++ web server. As background, I started off experimenting with Python/FastAPI, which is great, but there is too much friction to translate from pybind11-exported C++ objects to the format that FastAPI expects, and, of course, there are inherent performance limitations using Python, which could impact scaling up if the project were to be successful.
- Swig – Connect C/C++ programs with high-level programming languages
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returning numpy arrays via pybind11
I have a C++ function computing a large tensor which I would like to return to Python as a NumPy array via pybind11.
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I created smooth_lines python module, great for drawing software
This is based on the Google Ink Stroke Modeler C++ library, and using pybind11 to make it available on python.
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Facial Landmark Detection with C++
pybind11 makes it easy to call C++ from Python if you want to mix.
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Python’s Multiprocessing Performance Problem
If you've never used Pybind before these pybind tests[1] and this repo[2] have good examples you can crib to get started (in addition to the docs). Once you handle passing/returning/creating the main data types (list, tuple, dict, set, numpy array) the first time, then it's mostly smooth sailing.
Pybind offers a lot of functionality, but core "good parts" I've found useful are (a) use a numpy array in Python and pass it to a C++ method to work on, (b) pass your python data structure to pybind and then do work on it in C++ (some copy overhead), and (c) Make a class/struct in C++ and expose it to Python (so no copying overhead and you can create nice cache-aware structs, etc.).
[1] https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/blob/master/tests/test_py...
- Making Python Web Application with C++ Backend
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Using pybind11 with minGW to cross compile pyhton module for Windows
I have a python module for which the logic is written in C++ and I use pybind11 to expose the objects and functions to Python.
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IPC communication between rust, c++, and python
Reading from Python requires a wrapper, using pybind11 this is fairly done.
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[ADVICE] Python to C++
Also I can highly recommend starting using C++ to augment your Python code, i.e. find the parts that are slow or undoable in Python and write those in C++ then expose them as Python functions. You can use https://github.com/pybind/pybind11 to call C++ code from Python.
xeus-cling
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Interactive GCC (igcc) is a read-eval-print loop (REPL) for C/C++
More recent activity, but based on clang: https://github.com/jupyter-xeus/xeus-cling https://github.com/root-project/cling
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TermiC: Terminal C, Interactive C/C++ REPL shell created with BASH
If you like interactive c/c++, how a look at https://github.com/jupyter-xeus/xeus-cling, that allow you to run the c/c++ repl in Jupyter, either in web interface, and terminal interfaces.
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IDE for CPP(leetcode)
There are Cpp intepreters like Cling. There are even cpp notebooks like https://github.com/jupyter-xeus/xeus-cling. If that's an "IDE" it's questionable
- How does 3[a] gives the element at index 3 in an array?
- For those defending Python and citing Jupyter notebook scripting as the reason
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Why tho?
Holy shit, its actually a thing for C++ https://github.com/jupyter-xeus/xeus-cling. Now if only there was a C version...
- Changing std:sort at Google’s Scale and Beyond
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Jupyter refuses C++
Links I tried and failed:https://github.com/jupyter-xeus/xeus-cling
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How to write multiple programs in one c file? (like we can do for python files in jupyter notebook )
Are you talking about interpreted C++? Xeus-cling is your friend (i.e., C++ interpreter).
- Turns Jupyter notebooks into standalone web applications and dashboards
What are some alternatives?
PyO3 - Rust bindings for the Python interpreter
jupyterlite - Wasm powered Jupyter running in the browser 💡
nanobind - nanobind: tiny and efficient C++/Python bindings
cling - The cling C++ interpreter
Optional Argument in C++ - Named Optional Arguments in C++17
examples - Fully-working mlpack example programs
setuptools-rust - Setuptools plugin for Rust support
Pluto.jl - 🎈 Simple reactive notebooks for Julia
PEGTL - Parsing Expression Grammar Template Library
sanitizers - AddressSanitizer, ThreadSanitizer, MemorySanitizer
sol2 - Sol3 (sol2 v3.0) - a C++ <-> Lua API wrapper with advanced features and top notch performance - is here, and it's great! Documentation:
awesome-cpp - A curated list of awesome C++ (or C) frameworks, libraries, resources, and shiny things. Inspired by awesome-... stuff.