[Chicago] Python Source?
Chris McAvoy
chris.mcavoy at gmail.com
Thu Mar 8 16:35:08 CET 2007
Hi Skip,
On 3/7/07, skip at pobox.com <skip at pobox.com> wrote:
>
> Chris> As an idea for a future meeting, is anyone on list familiar with
> Chris> the Python source enough to give a tour? Nothing huge, but I'm
> Chris> sort of interested in it. Not that I think I'll do anything with
> Chris> it, but just as a "let's all get a little more familiar with the
> Chris> source."
>
> I used to be, back in the day. I suppose how well I could lead a discussion
> depends on how much detail you want. Can you pose some questions you think
> might be reasonable to answer with such a tour?
I've been thinking about your question...I don't have a good answer.
However, I do have the following loose ramblings.
I just opened up the code in a text editor, and thought "it would be
cool to get a guided tour of this code." I don't have a language
design background, so from that very naive text-opening, I'm just sort
of interested in how Python "works." Stuff like, which data
structures are written in C, which are in pure Python...how does the
parser work? It might also be a good chance to work in the goals of
PyPy.
At Pycon, I attended a few of the Stackless talks, and realized I
really didn't fully understand why stackless was significant or
different from the standard C Python (apart from the speed
improvements and nice fun looking threading improvements.)
What I'm asking is kind of a big question, and sort of really deserves
a several semester computer science program to answer. It's me, using
ChiPy as my own personal un-university. If you're up for this vague
challenge, I'm totally interested in listening.
Chris
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