On 2008-10-13, Ognjen Bezanov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I am a third year computer science student and I'm the process of > selection for my final year project. > > One option that was thought up was the idea of implement my > own version of the python interpreter (I'm referring to > CPython here). Either as a process running on another OS or as > a process running directly on the CPU. > > Now, I can't seem to find a decent source of information on > the python interpreter.
You mean the virtual machine? > I have made the assumption that Python works very much like > Java, you have code that is compiled into bytecode, which is > then executed in a virtual machine. IS this correct? Yes. There are python compilers that generate bytecode for a variety of VMs: * CPython -- Python Virtual Machine (PVM) * Jython -- Java Virtual Machine (JVM) * Iron Python -- .Net Virtual Machine > Is there a good source to give me an overview of Python > internals? (I can look at the code, but I would find it easier > to understand if I can see the "big picture" as well) The internals of what? One of the compilers? The PVM? > Also, any pro's out there willing to chime on the feasibility > of implementing python to run directly on the hardware > (without an underlying OS)? I don't expect 100% compatibility, > but would the basics (branching, looping, arithmatic) be > feasible? I would think so. Without any file, terminal, or network I/O, I don't see how you'll be able to do anything useful... -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! I demand IMPUNITY! at visi.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list