| Newsgroups: comp.lang.misc,comp.lang.c,comp.lang.c++,comp.lang.perl,comp.lang.tcl |
| Followup-to: comp.lang.misc |
| Subject: Python 1.0.0 is out! |
| |
| --> Tired of decyphering the Perl code you wrote last week? |
| |
| --> Frustrated with Bourne shell syntax? |
| |
| --> Spent too much time staring at core dumps lately? |
| |
| Maybe you should try Python, the next generation object-oriented |
| scripting and prototyping language, with a *readable* syntax. Python |
| has been used by hundreds of happy users all over the world during the |
| past three years, and is now ready for prime time. |
| |
| Python is an interpreted language, and has the usual advantages of |
| such languages, such as run-time checks (e.g. bounds checking), |
| execution of dynamically generated code, automatic memory allocation, |
| high level operations on strings, lists and dictionaries (associative |
| arrays), and a fast edit-compile-run cycle. Additionally, it features |
| modules, classes, exceptions, and dynamic linking of extensions |
| written in C or C++. It has arbitrary precision integers. |
| |
| Python can be run interactively, and there is an extensive Emacs |
| editing mode which includes the capability to execute regions of code. |
| For the truly desperate there is a source level debugger (written in |
| Python, of course :-). |
| |
| Python comes with a large library of standard modules and classes, as |
| well as an extensive set of demo programs. It has interfaces to most |
| Unix system calls and library functions, and there exist extensions |
| that interface to window systems and graphics libraries like X and |
| SGI's GL. |
| |
| Python's source (in C) and documentation (in LaTeX and PostScript) are |
| freely available on the Internet. It builds without intervention on |
| most Unix platforms: error-free builds have been confirmed for SGI |
| IRIX 4 and 5, Sun SunOS 4 and Solaris 2, HP-UX, DEC Ultrix and OSF/1, |
| IBM AIX, and SCO ODT 3.0. A Macintosh binary is also available -- a |
| DOS binary is in the works. |
| |
| If you have a WWW viewer (e.g. Mosaic), you can see all Python |
| documentation on-line: point your viewer at the URL |
| http://www.cwi.nl/~guido/Python.html. |
| |
| The source and documentation are available by anonymous ftp from the |
| following sites -- please pick the one closest to you: |
| |
| Site IP address Directory |
| |
| ftp.cwi.nl 192.16.184.180 /pub/python |
| gatekeeper.dec.com 16.1.0.2 /pub/plan/python/cwi |
| ftp.uu.net 192.48.96.9 /languages/python |
| ftp.fu-berlin.de 130.133.4.50 /pub/unix/languages/python |
| |
| The file is called python1.0.0.tar.Z (some mirror sites convert it to |
| a .gz file or split it up in separate parts). See the INDEX file for |
| other goodies: FAQ, NEWS, PostScript, Emacs info, Mac binary, etc. |
| (Please don't ask me to mail it to you -- at 1.76 Megabytes it is |
| unwieldy at least...) |
| |
| There's a mailing list; write to <python-list@cwi.nl> to subscribe (no |
| LISTSERV commands please). A FAQ list is regularly posted to |
| comp.lang.misc. A newsgroup may be created in the near future. |
| |
| [Excuse the hype -- Python really is a neat language, if I may say so. |
| Please direct all followups to comp.lang.misc only.] |
| |
| --Guido van Rossum, CWI, Amsterdam <Guido.van.Rossum@cwi.nl> |
| URL: <http://www.cwi.nl/cwi/people/Guido.van.Rossum.html> |