On Mon, 19 May 2008 08:53:11 -0700, Henrique Dante de Almeida wrote: > On May 19, 6:52 am, Bruno Desthuilliers <bruno. > [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Henrique Dante de Almeida a écrit : >> >> > On May 17, 7:32 pm, Vicent Giner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> Hello. >> >> (snip) >> >> However, it is usually said that Python is not a compiled but >> >> interpreted programming language —I mean, it is not like C, in that >> >> sense. >> >> (snip) >> > I guess that python is not a good language for that. >> (snip) >> > My opinion: choose compiled or byte compiled languages. >> >> Slightly OT (ie : not talking about computation-heavy alorgithm being >> better implemented in C then wrapped in Python - this seems quite >> obvious) but just a couple facts: >> >> 1/ being interpreted or compiled (for whatever definition of these >> terms) is not a property of a language, but a property of an >> implementation of a language. >> >> 2/ actually, all known Python implementations compile to byte-code. > > Yes, I was actually referring to statically typed JIT-compiled > languages. Sorry about that, blame the beers that entered my digestive > system that night. :-P
[beer.blame() for beer in beers] if len(beers) > 2: news_reader.stop_working() :-) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list