On May 15, 6:30 am, Anthony Irwin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > #1 Does python have something like javas .jar packages. A jar file > contains all the program files and you can execute the program with > java -jar program.jar
As someone else has said, Python has eggs: http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/PythonEggs > #3 Is there any equivalent to jfreechart and jfreereport > (http://www.jfree.orgfor details) in python. I can't remember what it is I use - I haven't got access to my server at the moment... But look in the cheese shop - I'm fairly sure it was from there. I'll post details if I remember. Alternatively this looks good (though I haven't tried it and it's only free for non-commercial use): http://www.dislin.de > #5 someone said that they used to use python but stopped because the > language changed or made stuff depreciated (I can fully remember > which) and old code stopped working. Is code written today likely to > still work in 5+ years or do they depreciate stuff and you have to update? Any language will have some compatibility problems when upgrading to a different version, and so you have the option of updating your program or using an old version of the language. I'm a professional Java developer, and though Java 6 has been out for some time now, every company I've worked for in the last couple of years still uses Java 1.4 due to problems with the upgrade. Python does strive however to stay backward compatible (3k not withstanding), and I've upgraded from 2.3 to 2.4 and now 2.5 with no problems. > Also does anyone else have any useful comments about python vs java > without starting a flame war. As I said, I'm a professional Java developer, and much prefer programming in Python when I can (and am even getting quite a lot of Python work at the moment via Jython :-) ) -- Ant... http://antroy.blogspot.com/ -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list