I've been writing Python for good long while now without thinking too
hard about this, but I just had a realization this weekend.
Back when the earth's crust was still cooling and we all rode dinosaurs
to our jobs, local variables got allocated onto the stack, and dynamic
memory from malloc or DIM explicitly allocated variables on the heap.
Python's objects all have a lifespan dictated by the continued existence
of references to them and thus can transcend the lifetime of the current
function in ways not known at translation time. So am I right in
thinking that all Python objects are out on the heap? And that the
references themselves may or may not wind up on the stack depending on
what flavor you're running?
Answers to these questions have very little bearing on how I actually
write Python, mind, but now I'm curious.
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Rob Gaddi, Highland Technology -- www.highlandtechnology.com
Email address domain is currently out of order. See above to fix.
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https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list