| Comparing Python to Other Languages |
| ----------------------------------- |
| |
| These comparisons are a personal view. Comments are requested. |
| --Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> |
| |
| Python is often compared to other interpreted languages such as Java, |
| JavaScript, Perl, Tcl, or Smalltalk. Comparisons to C++, Common Lisp |
| and Scheme can also be enlightening. In this section I will briefly |
| compare Python to each of these languages. These comparisons |
| concentrate on language issues only. In practice, the choice of a |
| programming language is often dictated by other real-world constraints |
| such as cost, availability, training, and prior investment, or even |
| emotional attachment. Since these aspects are highly variable, it |
| seems a waste of time to consider them much for this publication. |
| |
| Java |
| |
| Python programs are generally expected to run slower than Java |
| programs, but they also take much less time to develop. Python |
| programs are typically 3-5 times shorter than equivalent Java |
| programs. This difference can be attributed to Python's built-in |
| high-level data types and its dynamic typing. For example, a Python |
| programmer wastes no time declaring the types of arguments or |
| variables, and Python's powerful polymorphic list and dictionary |
| types, for which rich syntactic support is built straight into the |
| language, find a use in almost every Python program. Because of the |
| run-time typing, Python's run time must work harder than Java's. For |
| example, when evaluating the expression a+b, it must first inspect the |
| objects a and b to find out their type, which is not known at compile |
| time. It then invokes the appropriate addition operation, which may be |
| an overloaded user-defined method. Java, on the other hand, can |
| perform an efficient integer or floating point addition, but requires |
| variable declarations for a and b, and does not allow overloading of |
| the + operator for instances of user-defined classes. |
| |
| For these reasons, Python is much better suited as a "glue" language, |
| while Java is better characterized as a low-level implementation |
| language. In fact, the two together make an excellent |
| combination. Components can be developed in Java and combined to form |
| applications in Python; Python can also be used to prototype |
| components until their design can be "hardened" in a Java |
| implementation. To support this type of development, a Python |
| implementation written in Java is under development, which allows |
| calling Python code from Java and vice versa. In this implementation, |
| Python source code is translated to Java bytecode (with help from a |
| run-time library to support Python's dynamic semantics). |
| |
| Javascript |
| |
| Python's "object-based" subset is roughly equivalent to |
| JavaScript. Like JavaScript (and unlike Java), Python supports a |
| programming style that uses simple functions and variables without |
| engaging in class definitions. However, for JavaScript, that's all |
| there is. Python, on the other hand, supports writing much larger |
| programs and better code reuse through a true object-oriented |
| programming style, where classes and inheritance play an important |
| role. |
| |
| Perl |
| |
| Python and Perl come from a similar background (Unix scripting, which |
| both have long outgrown), and sport many similar features, but have a |
| different philosophy. Perl emphasizes support for common |
| application-oriented tasks, e.g. by having built-in regular |
| expressions, file scanning and report generating features. Python |
| emphasizes support for common programming methodologies such as data |
| structure design and object-oriented programming, and encourages |
| programmers to write readable (and thus maintainable) code by |
| providing an elegant but not overly cryptic notation. As a |
| consequence, Python comes close to Perl but rarely beats it in its |
| original application domain; however Python has an applicability well |
| beyond Perl's niche. |
| |
| Tcl |
| |
| Like Python, Tcl is usable as an application extension language, as |
| well as a stand-alone programming language. However, Tcl, which |
| traditionally stores all data as strings, is weak on data structures, |
| and executes typical code much slower than Python. Tcl also lacks |
| features needed for writing large programs, such as modular |
| namespaces. Thus, while a "typical" large application using Tcl |
| usually contains Tcl extensions written in C or C++ that are specific |
| to that application, an equivalent Python application can often be |
| written in "pure Python". Of course, pure Python development is much |
| quicker than having to write and debug a C or C++ component. It has |
| been said that Tcl's one redeeming quality is the Tk toolkit. Python |
| has adopted an interface to Tk as its standard GUI component library. |
| |
| Smalltalk |
| |
| Perhaps the biggest difference between Python and Smalltalk is |
| Python's more "mainstream" syntax, which gives it a leg up on |
| programmer training. Like Smalltalk, Python has dynamic typing and |
| binding, and everything in Python is an object. However, Python |
| distinguishes built-in object types from user-defined classes, and |
| currently doesn't allow inheritance from built-in types. Smalltalk's |
| standard library of collection data types is more refined, while |
| Python's library has more facilities for dealing with Internet and WWW |
| realities such as email, HTML and FTP. Python has a different |
| philosophy regarding the development environment and distribution of |
| code. Where Smalltalk traditionally has a monolithic "system image" |
| which comprises both the environment and the user's program, Python |
| stores both standard modules and user modules in individual files |
| which can easily be rearranged or distributed outside the system. One |
| consequence is that there is more than one option for attaching a |
| Graphical User Interface (GUI) to a Python program, since the GUI is |
| not built into the system. |
| |
| C++ |
| |
| Almost everything said for Java also applies for C++, just more so: |
| where Python code is typically 3-5 times shorter than equivalent Java |
| code, it is often 5-10 times shorter than equivalent C++ code! |
| Anecdotal evidence suggests that one Python programmer can finish in |
| two months what two C++ programmers can't complete in a year. Python |
| shines as a glue language, used to combine components written in C++. |
| |
| Common Lisp and Scheme |
| |
| These languages are close to Python in their dynamic semantics, but so |
| different in their approach to syntax that a comparison becomes almost |
| a religious argument: is Lisp's lack of syntax an advantage or a |
| disadvantage? It should be noted that Python has introspective |
| capabilities similar to those of Lisp, and Python programs can |
| construct and execute program fragments on the fly. Usually, |
| real-world properties are decisive: Common Lisp is big (in every |
| sense), and the Scheme world is fragmented between many incompatible |
| versions, where Python has a single, free, compact implementation. |