Can cython use the new type hinting from python 3?
Just checkout the previous version from your git repo.
Can cython use the new type hinting from python 3?
Just checkout the previous version from your git repo.
>There's a couple of levels below C and about a billion above, C is low level.
There aren't a "couple" of layers between C and the hardware. There isn't a couple of layers between Assembly and the Hardware. There isn't even a couple layers between microcode and the hardware. C is a high level language. The leap between C and Python is a thousand times smaller than the leap from C to raw machine code. C has no direct relationship to a modern x86 processor.
>With PyPy it's similar.
But doesn't PyPy accept native CPython 3.5 code? I don't think you would need to rewrite your code for it to run on PyPy.
What? It comes from being a compiled language. Christ, when did Jow Forums become this dumb. Ever noticed how every compiled language is faster than every interpreted language? The conversion to machine code is done before runtime.
C++ is most definitely not just sugar for C. Unless you're being pedantic about the definition, in which case literally all languages are syntactic sugar for assembly. The compiler makes all the difference user.
Are you retarded?
Being close to hardware doesn't make a language fast. Having no modern features doesn't make a language fast either. Have a good day.
This is true but you're still retarded. A large part of it literally is the fact it's C, the compiler itself. Code written in C will always out perform code that does the same thing in any other language bar assembly.
>what is git
>Not using a mutt language like Julia
>First run is slow like Python
>Second run is faster than C
Eat shit purists, mutts 4 life.