On Sun, May 25, 2014 at 1:06 PM, bookaa bookaa <rors...@gmail.com> wrote: > This tool can be called 'Python to GoLang', which translate Python source to > Golang source. And then you can compile the Go files to executable binary. > (btw: Go is a new C-like compilable language, open source). >
Sounds like you're writing a Python implementation that uses a Go backend. As Pythons go, this is comparable to using Java, or Mono, or RPython, or C, or anything else. So there are two questions: 1) How compatible is your Python-to-Golang converter with all the nuances of Python code? Does it work perfectly on any arbitrary Python script? And, what version of Python is it aimed at? 2) What's performance like? Presumably significantly better than CPython, as that's what you're boasting here. Have you run a standardized benchmark? How do the numbers look? If the answer is "It'll work on anything, but it's only faster if you restrict yourself to a specific subset of Python syntax", that's still useful. But we'd need to see figures that tell us when it's worth adding a separate dependency and another translation layer (after all, every layer adds its own bug potential). ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list