On 2 October 2013 23:28, Michael Schwarz wrote:
>
> I will look into that too, that sounds very convenient. But am I right, that
> to use Cython the non-Python code needs to be written in the Cython language,
> which means I can't just copy&past C code into it? For my current project,
> this is
On 2013-W40-3, at 21:15, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> Michael Schwarz, 02.10.2013 17:38:
>> I've just started looking into distutils because I need to write an
>> extension module in C (for performance reasons) and distutils seems to be
>> the most straight-forward way.
>>
>> I've had success building
Michael Schwarz, 02.10.2013 17:38:
> I've just started looking into distutils because I need to write an
> extension module in C (for performance reasons) and distutils seems to be
> the most straight-forward way.
>
> I've had success building a C file into a Python extension module using
> "pytho
On 2013-W40-3, at 19:15, "Gisle Vanem" wrote:
> "Michael Schwarz" wrote:
>
>> So how do I run my code so it will find the built extension module? Do I
>> pass the output directory on the command line manually or is there some
>> other solution? I would like to still be able to run the code from
"Michael Schwarz" wrote:
So how do I run my code so it will find the built extension module? Do I
pass the output directory on the command line manually or is there some
other solution? I would like to still be able to run the code from the
source directory as I'm using PyCharm to edit and debu
Hi
I've just started looking into distutils because I need to write an
extension module in C (for performance reasons) and distutils seems to be
the most straight-forward way.
I've had success building a C file into a Python extension module using
"python setup.py build" but I am wondering what t