"codecraig" wrote:

>  I have a question about Python.  I know that it is an interpreted
> language, meaning a python program is converted to binary on the fly
> each time it is run, or compiled.
>  What would be the purpose of compiling?  I guess the compiled python
> code (question, is compiled python code called byte code?..if not, what
> is it called?) is not readable since it is not plain text, which may be
> a reason for compiling...but why else??

the Python runtime runs custom object code ("byte codes") on a virtual machine.
the compilation process converts source code to object code.  to speed things 
up,
the object code (or byte code, if you prefer) is stored on disk, so it can be 
reused
the next time the program is run.

</F> 



-- 
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to