Tim Roberts wrote: > The Python you're thinking of (CPython) is compiled to an intermediate > language, which is then interpreted by an interpreter loop, somewhat > remeniscent of Forth. It takes more cycles per instruction to run that > interpreter loop than it does to run the machine language, but not by much. > Java is not that much faster than CPython. > > There is another implementation (Jython) which compiled Python to the Java > intermediate language, which can then be JIT compiled, exactly like Java. > > There is also IronPython, which is Python for the .NET framework. It > compiles to a different intermediate language, which is also compiled at > execution time to machine code.
Not to forget PyPy, which uses an optimising JIT to compile things to native code. There's also Cython, where the intermediate language is (optimised) C, and the compilation to machine code happens at build time (or JIT-like at import time if you use pyximport). Regarding this: > Java is not that much faster than CPython. That is a rather simplified statement. To be a tiny bit more accurate, Java is faster for some applications and slower for others. Stefan -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list