Ivan Voras wrote:
> Ivan Voras wrote:
>
> > Because "bar and aba happen to be parts of extension library" :)
>
> To end this disussion: I meant "doing it in C" as a colloquial
> expression, not a technical one. The expression holds true for every
> case where a function/class/module/etc is impleme
Ivan Voras wrote:
> Because "bar and aba happen to be parts of extension library" :)
To end this disussion: I meant "doing it in C" as a colloquial
expression, not a technical one. The expression holds true for every
case where a function/class/module/etc is implemented in a lower-level
langua
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
>
> uhuh? so why did you just argue that
>
> if foo.bar():
> bar.aba()
>
> means "doing it in C" if bar and aba happens to be parts of an extension
> library ?
Because "bar and aba happen to be parts of extension library" :)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/
Terry Hancock wrote:
> To me, "doing it in C" implies that I must write some C
> code.
Ok, perhaps it is a bit imprecise :)
> In this case, that won't be required at all. Everything the
> OP wants to do can be done exclusively by writing Python
> code. He will, of course, be *using* some exten
On 2006-02-03, Ivan Voras <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Actually, manipulating and mixing audio samples can be both fast and
elegant, in Python, if you use Numeric or a similar library.
>>>
>>>... at which point you're actually doing it in C, not pure python... :)
>>
>> If that's the way you
On Fri, 03 Feb 2006 20:03:01 +0100
Ivan Voras <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Grant Edwards wrote:
> > On 2006-02-03, Ivan Voras <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >>[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >>
> >>>Actually, manipulating and mixing audio samples can be
> >both fast and >>elegant, in Python, if you u
Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2006-02-03, Ivan Voras <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>
>>>Actually, manipulating and mixing audio samples can be both fast and
>>>elegant, in Python, if you use Numeric or a similar library.
>>
>>... at which point you're actually doing it in C,
On Fri, 3 Feb 2006, Ivan Voras wrote:
> Levi Campbell wrote:
>
>> Hi, I'm thinking about writing a system for DJing in python, but I'm
>> not sure if Python is fast enough to handle the realtime audio needed
>> for DJing, could a guru shed some light on this subject and tell me if
>> this is do
On 2006-02-03, Fuzzyman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Come to that, you're **really** doing it in machine code...
And probably not the machine code emitted by the assembler but
rather the actual micro-code that's implemented in hardware
that's running a program that implements the VM for the machi
> If that's the way you want to look at it, there is nothing that
> can be done in pure python. Both the built-ins and the basic
> operators and sematics are implimented in C.
What makes python a powerful programming language? It's the fact that
it bundles up all sorts of c-code into a nice easy
On 2006-02-03, Ivan Voras <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>> Actually, manipulating and mixing audio samples can be both fast and
>> elegant, in Python, if you use Numeric or a similar library.
>
> ... at which point you're actually doing it in C, not pure python... :)
If t
Ivan Voras wrote:
> > Come to that, you're **really** doing it in machine code...
>
> I've yet to see someone calling
>
> if a == '5':
> print "it's 5"
>
> machine code. It's the distinction on which level the program's logic is
> implemented, not at which level it's executed.
uhuh? so why
Fuzzyman wrote:
> Only in as much as doing anything in Python is *really* doing it in C,
> surely ?
>
> Come to that, you're **really** doing it in machine code...
I've yet to see someone calling
if a == '5':
print "it's 5"
machine code. It's the distinction on which level the program's l
Ivan Voras wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > Actually, manipulating and mixing audio samples can be both fast and
> > elegant, in Python, if you use Numeric or a similar library.
>
> ... at which point you're actually doing it in C, not pure python... :)
Only in as much as doing anything in
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Actually, manipulating and mixing audio samples can be both fast and
> elegant, in Python, if you use Numeric or a similar library.
... at which point you're actually doing it in C, not pure python... :)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Levi Campbell wrote:
> Any and all mixing would probably happen in some sort of multimedia
> library written in C (it would be both clumsy to program and slow to
> execute if the calculations of raw samples/bytes were done in python) so
> there shouldn't be a noticable performance hit.
Actually, m
On Fri, 03 Feb 2006 02:35:56 +0100
Ivan Voras <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Levi Campbell wrote:
> > Hi, I'm thinking about writing a system for DJing in
> > python, but I'm not sure if Python is fast enough to
> > handle the realtime audio needed for DJing
>
> Any and all mixing would probably hap
Levi Campbell wrote:
> Hi, I'm thinking about writing a system for DJing in python, but I'm
> not sure if Python is fast enough to handle the realtime audio needed
> for DJing, could a guru shed some light on this subject and tell me if
> this is doable or if I'm out of my fscking mind?
Any and al
Levi Campbell wrote:
> Hi, I'm thinking about writing a system for DJing in python, but I'm
> not sure if Python is fast enough to handle the realtime audio needed
> for DJing, could a guru shed some light on this subject and tell me if
> this is doable or if I'm out of my fscking mind?
>
What do
Hi, I'm thinking about writing a system for DJing in python, but I'm
not sure if Python is fast enough to handle the realtime audio needed
for DJing, could a guru shed some light on this subject and tell me if
this is doable or if I'm out of my fscking mind?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/list
20 matches
Mail list logo