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gpython is a part re-implementation, part port of the Python 3.4 interpreter in Go. Although there are many areas of improvement, it stands as an noteworthy achievement in capability and potential.

gpython includes:

gpython does not include many python modules as many of the core modules are written in C not python. The converted modules are:

Install

Download directly from the releases page

Or if you have Go installed:

go install github.com/go-python/gpython

Objectives

gpython started as an experiment to investigate how hard porting Python to Go might be. It turns out that all those C modules are a significant barrier to making gpython a complete replacement to CPython.

However, to those who want to embed a highly popular and known language into their Go application, gpython could be a great choice over less capable (or lesser known) alternatives.

Status

gpython currently:

Speed hasn't been a goal of the conversions however it runs pystone at about 20% of the speed of CPython. A π computation test runs quicker under gpython as the Go long integer primitives are likely faster than the Python ones.

@ncw started gpython in 2013 and work on is sporadic. If you or someone you know would be interested to take it futher, it would be much appreciated.

Getting Started

The embedding example demonstrates how to easily embed and invoke gpython from any Go application.

Of interest, gpython is able to run multiple interpreter instances simultaneously, allowing you to embed gpython naturally into your Go application. This makes it possible to use gpython in a server situation where complete interpreter independence is paramount. See this in action in the multi-context example.

If you are looking to get involved, a light and easy place to start is adding more convenience functions to py/util.go. See notes.txt for bigger ideas.

Other Projects of Interest

Community

You can chat with the go-python community (or which gpython is part) at go-python@googlegroups.com or on the Gophers Slack in the #go-python channel.

License

This is licensed under the MIT licence, however it contains code which was ported fairly directly directly from the CPython source code under the PSF LICENSE.