castironpi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >In CPython yes. In IronPython yes: the parts that are compiled into >machine code are the interpreter, *not user's code*.
WRONG! You are WRONG. At "compile" time, the Python code is compiled to an intermediate language. At "run" time, the intermediate language (which is still the user's code, just in another representation) is compiled into machine language. It is the user's program, not the interpreter. It's the exact same process that occurs in a C compiler. Most C compilers translate the C program to an intermediate form before finally converting it to machine language. The only difference is that, in a C compiler, both steps occur within the compiler. In IronPython, the two steps are separated in time. There is no other difference. >Without that >step, the interpreter would be running on an interpreter, but that >doesn't get the user's statement 'a= b+ 1' into registers-- it gets >'push, push, add, pop' into registers. You have a fundamental misunderstanding of the compilation process. -- Tim Roberts, [EMAIL PROTECTED] Providenza & Boekelheide, Inc. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list