Non-official Python implementations
IronPython
Section titled “IronPython”Open-source implementation for .NET and Mono written in C#, licensed under Apache License 2.0. It relies on DLR (Dynamic Language Runtime). It supports only version 2.7, version 3 is currently being developped.
Differences with CPython:
- Tight integration with .NET Framework.
- Strings are Unicode by default.
- Does not support extensions for CPython written in C.
- Does not suffer from Global Interpreter Lock.
- Performance is usually lower, though it depends on tests.
Hello World
Section titled “Hello World”print "Hello World!"You can also use .NET functions:
import clrfrom System import ConsoleConsole.WriteLine("Hello World!")External links
Section titled “External links”Jython
Section titled “Jython”Open-source implementation for JVM written in Java, licensed under Python Software Foundation License. It supports only version 2.7, version 3 is currently being developped.
Differences with CPython:
- Tight integration with JVM.
- Strings are Unicode.
- Does not support extensions for CPython written in C.
- Does not suffer from Global Interpreter Lock.
- Performance is usually lower, though it depends on tests.
Hello World
Section titled “Hello World”print "Hello World!"You can also use Java functions:
from java.lang import SystemSystem.out.println("Hello World!")External links
Section titled “External links”Transcrypt
Section titled “Transcrypt”Transcrypt is a tool to precompile a fairly extensive subset of Python into compact, readable Javascript. It has the following characteristics:
- Allows for classical OO programming with multiple inheritance using pure Python syntax, parsed by CPython’s native parser
- Seamless integration with the universe of high-quality web-oriented JavaScript libraries, rather than the desktop-oriented Python ones
- Hierarchical URL based module system allowing module distribution via PyPi
- Simple relation between Python source and generated JavaScript code for easy debugging
- Multi-level sourcemaps and optional annotation of target code with source references
- Compact downloads, kB’s rather than MB’s
- Optimized JavaScript code, using memoization (call caching) to optionally bypass the prototype lookup chain
- Operator overloading can be switched on and off locally to facilitate readable numerical math
Code size and speed
Section titled “Code size and speed”Experience has shown that 650 kB of Python sourcecode roughly translates in the same amount of JavaScript source code. The speed matches the speed of handwritten JavaScript and can surpass it if call memoizing is switched on.
Integration with HTML
Section titled “Integration with HTML”<script src="__javascript__/hello.js"></script><h2>Hello demo</h2>
<p><div id = "greet">...</div><button onclick="hello.solarSystem.greet ()">Click me repeatedly!</button>
<p><div id = "explain">...</div><button onclick="hello.solarSystem.explain ()">And click me repeatedly too!</button>Integration with JavaScript and DOM
Section titled “Integration with JavaScript and DOM”from itertools import chain
class SolarSystem: planets = [list (chain (planet, (index + 1,))) for index, planet in enumerate (( ('Mercury', 'hot', 2240), ('Venus', 'sulphurous', 6052), ('Earth', 'fertile', 6378), ('Mars', 'reddish', 3397), ('Jupiter', 'stormy', 71492), ('Saturn', 'ringed', 60268), ('Uranus', 'cold', 25559), ('Neptune', 'very cold', 24766) ))]
lines = ( '{} is a {} planet', 'The radius of {} is {} km', '{} is planet nr. {} counting from the sun' )
def __init__ (self): self.lineIndex = 0
def greet (self): self.planet = self.planets [int (Math.random () * len (self.planets))] document.getElementById ('greet') .innerHTML = 'Hello {}'.format (self.planet [0]) self.explain ()
def explain (self): document.getElementById ('explain').innerHTML = ( self.lines [self.lineIndex] .format (self.planet [0], self.planet [self.lineIndex + 1]) ) self.lineIndex = (self.lineIndex + 1) % 3 solarSystem = SolarSystem ()Integration with other JavaScript libraries
Section titled “Integration with other JavaScript libraries”Transcrypt can be used in combination with any JavaScript library without special measures or syntax. In the documentation examples are given for a.o. react.js, riot.js, fabric.js and node.js.
Relation between Python and JavaScript code
Section titled “Relation between Python and JavaScript code”Python
class A: def __init__ (self, x): self.x = x
def show (self, label): print ('A.show', label, self.x)
class B: def __init__ (self, y): alert ('In B constructor') self.y = y
def show (self, label): print ('B.show', label, self.y)
class C (A, B): def __init__ (self, x, y): alert ('In C constructor') A.__init__ (self, x) B.__init__ (self, y) self.show ('constructor')
def show (self, label): B.show (self, label) print ('C.show', label, self.x, self.y)
a = A (1001)a.show ('america')
b = B (2002)b.show ('russia')
c = C (3003, 4004)c.show ('netherlands')
show2 = c.showshow2 ('copy')JavaScript
var A = __class__ ('A', [object], { get __init__ () {return __get__ (this, function (self, x) { self.x = x; });}, get show () {return __get__ (this, function (self, label) { print ('A.show', label, self.x); });}});var B = __class__ ('B', [object], { get __init__ () {return __get__ (this, function (self, y) { alert ('In B constructor'); self.y = y; });}, get show () {return __get__ (this, function (self, label) { print ('B.show', label, self.y); });}});var C = __class__ ('C', [A, B], { get __init__ () {return __get__ (this, function (self, x, y) { alert ('In C constructor'); A.__init__ (self, x); B.__init__ (self, y); self.show ('constructor'); });}, get show () {return __get__ (this, function (self, label) { B.show (self, label); print ('C.show', label, self.x, self.y); });}});var a = A (1001);a.show ('america');var b = B (2002);b.show ('russia');var c = C (3003, 4004);c.show ('netherlands');var show2 = c.show;show2 ('copy');External links
Section titled “External links”- Official website: http://www.transcrypt.org/
- Repository: https://github.com/JdeH/Transcrypt