On Tuesday, January 23, 2018 at 7:05:02 PM UTC+5:30, bartc wrote: > On 23/01/2018 13:23, kushal bhattacharya wrote: > > On Wednesday, January 17, 2018 at 4:34:23 PM UTC+5:30, kushal bhattacharya > > wrote: > >> Hi, > >> Is there any python framework or any tool as which can generate C code > >> from python code as it is . > >> > >> Thanks, > >> Kushal > > > > yes i have but it generates a complex C code with python dependencies.I > > want to call the generated function from another C code but i Cant figure > > out how to do that > > Because the translation isn't simply defined. > > I've just tried nuitka on the Python code 'a=b+c', and it generates 2400 > lines of C. The main purpose seems to be to generate a self-contained > executable corresponding to the Python, but generating first a C > equivalent then using a C compiler and linker. > > This equivalent code may just contain all the bits in CPython needed to > do the job, but bypassing all the stuff to do with executing actual > byte-code. But it also seems to do some optimisations (in the generated > C before it uses C compiler optimisations), so that if static types can > be inferred it might make use of that info. > > Perhaps you simply want to use Python syntax to write C code? That would > be a different kind of translator. And a simpler one, as 'a=b+c' > translates to 'a+b+c;' in C. > > -- > bartc
This is exactly what i meant to say.My goal is to translate the python code into its C equivalent with function name as it is. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list