Small Python?
Cameron Laird
claird at starbase.neosoft.com
Tue Oct 17 06:44:02 EDT 2000
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Tue Oct 17 06:44:02 EDT 2000
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In article <8sfrda01ven at drn.newsguy.com>, Armin Steinhoff <a-steinhoff at web_de> wrote: >In article <39EB2298.5D40A732 at sandqvist.com>, Sam says... >> >>Hi, >> >>I am quite fond of Python, and use it for several small things... key >>here is small. >> >>Is there anywhere a Minimalist Python? Sort of an adder, instead of the >>full-blown thing? I would be very interested in having such a beast, a >>SmallPython... >> >>Or failing that, which language is closest to Python - but significantly >>smaller? Say, 50kb or smaller? > > OO + less than 100kb -> http://www.tecgraf.puc-rio.br/lua > >Armin > I second the recommendation of Lua. In the absence of any more qualification, it's your best choice. What do you mean by 50kb? Is that to include C run-time modules? How do you want a language to be close to Python? In object orientation? "Embeddability"? Syntax hygiene? I'm surprised no one in this thread--at least the parts of it I've seen--has mentioned Deeply Embedded Python <URL:http://www.abo.fi/~iporres/python/>, SLOPPY <URL: http://deja.com/=dnc/getdoc.xp?AN=584072314>, or earlier versions of conventional Python, some of which I remember as in the 100-200 kb range, including all run-times. -- Cameron Laird <claird at NeoSoft.com> Business: http://www.Phaseit.net Personal: http://starbase.neosoft.com/~claird/home.html
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