I think the point you want to make is that Python needs vastly less lines of code as a similar application written in C++. I think Python might on average be 50-60% of comparable C++ code, but not the 1-2% you seem to want to claim. LOC is a somewhat arbitrairy measurement, but it gives an idea of what I'm talking about.
Your single example compares a simple use in Python with a much more elaborate framework in one of the worst C++ IDE's I know. I can easily give you a counter example: If I create a simple form in Eric3 it will generate about 500-600 lines of Python too. When using this in actual code the difference between a piece of C++ and Python would however be mostly cosmetic: void MyForm::exitFile() { close(); } ------------ vs. ---------------- def exitFile(self): self.close() Your example is very good at demonstrating why Python is very useful for simple and small projects. Simple programs are simpler in Python. All programming languages can be used to write horrible unreadable and inefficient code. Therefore I think it's better to compare best cases as it is to compare worst cases. In the large projects I've worked on most of the code has nothing to do with external libraries or IDE generated code, but only with other parts of the project and most of the advantages Python has in small simple projects are uninportant. I think C++ gives a little more tools to keep large projects manageable, mostly because you can find a lot more communication failures between programmers at compile time. I think the choice of a programming language is not very important in determining the overal succes of a project. C++ and Python are however my two favorite languages. I think it would be interesting if any readers with more experience as I have would comment on how Python behaves in large projects, and how much less lines they need compared to C++ or Java. I have worked on several C++ projects with a few million lines of code, I would appreciate experience with comparable projects. (can you do it in 10.000 Lines of Python?) >>> Thomas Heller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 07/01/05 11:36 AM >>> Thomas Heller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > "Adriaan Renting" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > >> I'm not a very experienced Python programmer yet, so I might be >> mistaken, but there are a few things that would make me prefer C++ over >> Python for large (over 500.000 LOC) projects. >> - namespaces >> - templates >> - strong type checking >> - data hiding >> - more available libraries and more advanced developement tools. >> >> I'm talking about managing the code, not the programmers, the project or >> schedules or what have you. Those are independent from the chosen >> programming language. > > Just a single datapoint: Implementing a trivial COM object in Python > requires, let's guess, about 10 or 20 lines of source code. > > When I do the same in MSVC6, the wizard creates 10 files, with nearly > 400 lines of code. Sure, I didn't have to write these code lines, but > I'm required to understand and manage them as well. Sorry, I forgot to include the .dsw and .dsp files in the above figure. Including them brings the LOC count up to 750 for the C++ project - although, to be fair, on the Python side a setup.py script for py2exe would also have to be written. In simple cases, this is another 10 lines. Thomas -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list