Skip to content
Projects
Groups
Snippets
Help
Loading...
Help
Support
Keyboard shortcuts
?
Submit feedback
Contribute to GitLab
Sign in / Register
Toggle navigation
C
cython
Project overview
Project overview
Details
Activity
Releases
Repository
Repository
Files
Commits
Branches
Tags
Contributors
Graph
Compare
Labels
Merge Requests
0
Merge Requests
0
Analytics
Analytics
Repository
Value Stream
Snippets
Snippets
Members
Members
Collapse sidebar
Close sidebar
Activity
Graph
Commits
Open sidebar
nexedi
cython
Commits
5db0a3f4
Commit
5db0a3f4
authored
Apr 02, 2011
by
Francesc Alted
Committed by
Robert Bradshaw
Apr 07, 2011
Browse files
Options
Browse Files
Download
Email Patches
Plain Diff
A first restructuration of Compilation section.
parent
dd3da6c2
Changes
1
Hide whitespace changes
Inline
Side-by-side
Showing
1 changed file
with
40 additions
and
79 deletions
+40
-79
docs/src/reference/compilation.rst
docs/src/reference/compilation.rst
+40
-79
No files found.
docs/src/reference/compilation.rst
View file @
5db0a3f4
...
...
@@ -6,49 +6,48 @@
Compilation
***********
* Cython code, unlike Python, must be compiled.
* This happens in two stages:
Cython code, unlike Python, must be compiled. This happens in two stages:
* A ``.pyx`` file is compiles by Cython to a ``.c`` file.
* The ``.c`` file is compiled by a C comiler to a ``.so`` file (or a ``.pyd`` file on Windows)
* A ``.pyx`` file is compiles by Cython to a ``.c`` file.
* The following sub-sections describe several ways to build your extension modules.
* The ``.c`` file is compiled by a C comiler to a ``.so`` file (or a
``.pyd`` file on Windows)
.. note:: The ``-a`` option
* Using the Cython compiler with the ``-a`` option will produce a really nice HTML file of the Cython generated ``.c`` code.
* Double clicking on the highlighted sections will expand the code to reveal what Cython has actually generated for you.
* This is very useful for understanding, optimizing or debugging your module.
The following sub-sections describe several ways to build your
extension modules.
=====================
From the Command Line
=====================
* Run the Cython compiler command with your options and list of ``.pyx`` files to generate::
Run the Cython compiler command with your options and list of ``.pyx``
files to generate. For example::
$ cython -a yourmod.pyx
* This creates a ``yourmod.c`` file. (and the -a switch produces a generated html file)
* Compiling your ``.c`` files will vary depending on your operating system.
* Python documentation for writing extension modules should have some details for your system.
This creates a ``yourmod.c`` file (and the -a switch produces a
generated html file).
* Here we give an example on a Linux system::
Compiling your ``.c`` files will vary depending on your operating
system. Python documentation for writing extension modules should
have some details for your system. Here we give an example on a Linux
system::
$ gcc -shared -pthread -fPIC -fwrapv -O2 -Wall -fno-strict-aliasing -I/usr/include/python2.5 -o yourmod.so yourmod.c
* ``gcc`` will need to have paths to your included header files and paths to libraries you need to link with.
* A ``yourmod.so`` file is now in the same directory.
* Your module, ``yourmod`` is available for you to import as you normally would.
[``gcc`` will need to have paths to your included header files and
paths to libraries you need to link with]
A ``yourmod.so`` file is now in the same directory and your module,
``yourmod``, is available for you to import as you normally would.
=========
Distutils
=========
* Ensure Distutils is installed in your system.
* The following assumes a Cython file to be compiled called *hello.pyx*.
*
C
reate a ``setup.py`` script::
First, make sure that ``distutils`` package is installed in your
system. The following assumes a Cython file to be compiled called
*
hello.pyx*. Now, c
reate a ``setup.py`` script::
from distutils.core import setup
from distutils.extension import Extension
...
...
@@ -62,78 +61,40 @@ Distutils
ext_modules = ext_modules
)
* Run the command ``python setup.py build_ext --inplace`` in your system's command shell.
* Your done.. import your new extension module into your python shell or script as normal.
=====
SCons
=====
to be completed...
Run the command ``python setup.py build_ext --inplace`` in your
system's command shell and you are done. Import your new extension
module into your python shell or script as normal.
=========
Pyximport
=========
* For generating Cython code right in your pure python modulc
e::
For generating Cython code right in your pure python module just typ
e::
>>> import pyximport; pyximport.install()
>>> import helloworld
>>> import helloworld
Hello World
* Use for simple Cython builds only.
* No extra C libraries.
* No special build setup
needed.
This allows you to automatically run Cython on every ``.pyx`` that
Python is trying to import. You should use this for simple Cython
builds only where no extra C libraries and no special building setup
is
needed.
* Also has experimental compilation support for normal Python modules.
In the case that Cython fails to compile a Python module, *pyximport*
will fall back to loading the source modules instead.
* Allows you to automatically run Cython on every ``.pyx`` and ``.py`` module that Python imports.
* This includes the standard library and installed packages.
* In the case that Cython fails to compile a Python module, *pyximport* will fall back to loading the source modules instead.
* The ``.py`` import mechanism is installed like this::
It is also possible to compile new ``.py`` modules that are being
imported (including the standard library and installed packages). For
using this feature, just tell that to ``pyximport``::
>>> pyximport.install(pyimport = True)
.. note:: Authors
Paul Prescod, Stefan Behnal
====
Sage
====
The Sage notebook allows transparently editing and
compiling Cython code simply by typing %cython at
the top of a cell and evaluate it. Variables and func-
tions defined in a Cython cell imported into the run-
ning session.
.. todo:: Provide a link to Sage docs
The Sage notebook allows transparently editing and compiling Cython
code simply by typing %cython at the top of a cell and evaluate
it. Variables and functions defined in a Cython cell imported into the
running session. Please check `Sage documentation
<http://www.sagemath.org/doc/>` for details.
Write
Preview
Markdown
is supported
0%
Try again
or
attach a new file
Attach a file
Cancel
You are about to add
0
people
to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Cancel
Please
register
or
sign in
to comment