Which pypy with >=3.3 Python compatibility
I need pypy that is Python 3.3 or, even better, Python 3.4 compatible. I can found the nightly builds at http://buildbot.pypy.org//nightly Which one should I use py3.3 or py3k? There are many more version. Should I use one of them? Thanks, Mike
Hi, 2015-04-13 17:29 GMT+02:00 Mike Müller <mmueller@python-academy.de>:
I need pypy that is Python 3.3 or, even better, Python 3.4 compatible. I can found the nightly builds at http://buildbot.pypy.org//nightly
There is a branch for the Python 3.3 port, named "py3.3". It's not complete, but probably enough for most usages. The builds are in the corresponding subdirectory: http://buildbot.pypy.org/nightly/py3.3/ Note that this branch is not built nightly, but only on-demand. I just started a new one ("pypy-c-jit-linux-x86-64"), let's see if it completes :-) As you have guessed, it's still Work In Progress, and should be considered as highly experimental.
Which one should I use py3.3 or py3k? There are many more version. Should I use one of them?
Thanks, Mike _______________________________________________ pypy-dev mailing list pypy-dev@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pypy-dev
-- Amaury Forgeot d'Arc
Am 13.04.15 um 17:42 schrieb Amaury Forgeot d'Arc:
Hi,
2015-04-13 17:29 GMT+02:00 Mike Müller <mmueller@python-academy.de <mailto:mmueller@python-academy.de>>:
I need pypy that is Python 3.3 or, even better, Python 3.4 compatible. I can found the nightly builds at http://buildbot.pypy.org//nightly
There is a branch for the Python 3.3 port, named "py3.3". It's not complete, but probably enough for most usages.
The builds are in the corresponding subdirectory: http://buildbot.pypy.org/nightly/py3.3/ Note that this branch is not built nightly, but only on-demand.
I just started a new one ("pypy-c-jit-linux-x86-64"), let's see if it completes :-)
Thanks.
As you have guessed, it's still Work In Progress, and should be considered as highly experimental.
Ok. Consider me warned. ;) Mike
Which one should I use py3.3 or py3k? There are many more version. Should I use one of them?
Thanks, Mike _______________________________________________ pypy-dev mailing list pypy-dev@python.org <mailto:pypy-dev@python.org> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pypy-dev
-- Amaury Forgeot d'Arc
From my experience, the main issue I have is that setuptools/pip bootstrapping doesn't work, at least on my setup. You need to install dependencies manually and play with PYTHONPATH environment variable.
For Python applications themselves, for now, it works pretty well, and when I found a bug, Amaury has fixed that quickly. -- Ludovic Gasc (GMLudo) http://www.gmludo.eu/ 2015-04-13 11:29 GMT-04:00 Mike Müller <mmueller@python-academy.de>:
I need pypy that is Python 3.3 or, even better, Python 3.4 compatible. I can found the nightly builds at http://buildbot.pypy.org//nightly
Which one should I use py3.3 or py3k? There are many more version. Should I use one of them?
Thanks, Mike _______________________________________________ pypy-dev mailing list pypy-dev@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pypy-dev
Am 13.04.15 um 17:50 schrieb Ludovic Gasc:
From my experience, the main issue I have is that setuptools/pip bootstrapping doesn't work, at least on my setup. You need to install dependencies manually and play with PYTHONPATH environment variable.
For Python applications themselves, for now, it works pretty well, and when I found a bug, Amaury has fixed that quickly.
Good to know. Just like in the good old times. ;) Mike
-- Ludovic Gasc (GMLudo) http://www.gmludo.eu/
2015-04-13 11:29 GMT-04:00 Mike Müller <mmueller@python-academy.de <mailto:mmueller@python-academy.de>>:
I need pypy that is Python 3.3 or, even better, Python 3.4 compatible. I can found the nightly builds at http://buildbot.pypy.org//nightly
Which one should I use py3.3 or py3k? There are many more version. Should I use one of them?
Thanks, Mike _______________________________________________ pypy-dev mailing list pypy-dev@python.org <mailto:pypy-dev@python.org> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pypy-dev
2015-04-13 17:50 GMT+02:00 Ludovic Gasc <gmludo@gmail.com>:
From my experience, the main issue I have is that setuptools/pip bootstrapping doesn't work, at least on my setup. You need to install dependencies manually and play with PYTHONPATH environment variable.
ensurepip is a 3.4 feature, right? I guess we need to wait a bit more. Or get involved and help us finish the 3.3 port first... -- Amaury Forgeot d'Arc
2015-04-13 12:10 GMT-04:00 Amaury Forgeot d'Arc <amauryfa@gmail.com>:
2015-04-13 17:50 GMT+02:00 Ludovic Gasc <gmludo@gmail.com>:
From my experience, the main issue I have is that setuptools/pip bootstrapping doesn't work, at least on my setup. You need to install dependencies manually and play with PYTHONPATH environment variable.
ensurepip is a 3.4 feature, right? I guess we need to wait a bit more.
I'm not an expert, but I don't think we speak of the same thing, I talk about this: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/setuptools#unix-wget https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/installing.html#install-pip This technique is the same as ensurepip ?
Or get involved and help us finish the 3.3 port first...
Of course, I'm agree with you to finish the 3.3 port first :-) And I try to help you as much as possible I can do with my little skills. To remember, I'm a simple dev guy, not a PyPy expert. FYI, I'm trying to implement monotonic timer in PyPy3.3 during PyCON sprint code, Benoît Chesneau finds me an example: https://gist.github.com/vext01/8c06136ca3522738234a No idea if I'll success, you'll see at the end of this week ;-) If you want to help me/give me tips/implement yourself, be my guest. Nevertheless, without pip, sorry, but at least for me, it's a little bit complicated to test easily libraries, especially with cffi. Or maybe easy_install is included ? I recognize I don't verified.
-- Amaury Forgeot d'Arc
Hi Ludovic, On 13 April 2015 at 19:03, Ludovic Gasc <gmludo@gmail.com> wrote:
FYI, I'm trying to implement monotonic timer in PyPy3.3 during PyCON sprint code, Benoît Chesneau finds me an example:
Fwiw, clock_gettime() and similar functions are already present in PyPy2 in the module ``__pypy__.time``. I didn't check where that code is in py3.3. I would guess it is similarly present in the ``__pypy__.time`` module, but simply needs to be made accessible from the standard place in Python 3 (the ``time`` module?). A bientôt, Armin.
participants (4)
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Amaury Forgeot d'Arc
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Armin Rigo
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Ludovic Gasc
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Mike Müller