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I am wondering if there are any tips or tricks to converting perl into python. It would be nice if there was a script like python's 2to3. Or perhaps some compatibility libraries. It doesn't have to be complete, anything to help speed up the process would be helpful.

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  • Seen this so many times, though your question seems a lot more reasonable than a lot of these types of questions.
    – Chris Lutz
    Apr 8, 2010 at 2:47
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    No tips, but an automatic conversion script would sort of require that Perl was parsable... jeffreykegler.com/Home/perl-and-undecidability :-)
    – ig0774
    Apr 8, 2010 at 2:49
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    Of course, the Perl that people actually write is very decidable, and there are plenty of Perl parsing tools available. Nice try though.
    – jrockway
    Apr 9, 2010 at 1:47
  • Why not port Python to Perl? Oct 30, 2021 at 1:53

6 Answers 6

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Keep a phrasebook handy as you go through the code you want to port.

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    Thank you for actually answering my question instead of telling me why I shouldn't/can't do it.
    – rook
    Apr 9, 2010 at 3:11
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There are so many ways of doing the same thing in Perl that writing any sort of crosscompiler would be... painful at best. Reconstruct (don't just translate) the program manually.

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  • It is probably feasible to compile a limited subset of Perl (such as RPerl) to Python. The RPerl compiler converts a subset of Perl to C++, so it could probably be converted from C++ to Python using the Seasnake compiler. Oct 1, 2021 at 20:20
  • Or... learn Perl and forget Python! (win) Oct 30, 2021 at 1:53
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Another approach is that you might be able to reuse existing Perl code and complement it with new Python code.

One possibility that might work for you is to use the perl Python module, which allows you to execute Perl code inside Python.

Another approach is to have Perl produce its output as simple text/JSON/YAML files which is parsed by Python for further processing. Thus, I was able to use my legacy Perl code without rewriting it, while switching to Python. Your mileage may vary, as this "gluing" method might be too slow for your needs. This "pass files" method is good when you have long calculations that produce intermediate results: you can start the computation in Perl, and continue it in Python.

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Unfortunately I ran in to the same pickle, there seems to be no direct way to do it. But if you are a vim savvy like I am you could quickly come up with a list like this one.

Just type all this in a file called(or something else) 'substitute' and open the Perl script(back up your original script first) and do :source path/to/the/substitute. Please note this is by no means perfect but might give you a good direction of start (Hopefully!)


    1,$s/\$\(.*\) /\1 /g
    1,$s/\$\(.*\)->/\1\./g
    1,$s/->/\./g
    1,$s/\$//g
    1,$s/ eq / \=\= //g
    1,$s/@//g
    1,$s/=>/:/g
    1,$s/use /import /g
    1,$s/::/\./g
    1,$s/||/or/g
    1,$s/&&/and/g
    1,$s/my //g
    1,$s/sub /def /g
    1,$s/ undef/ None/g
    1,$s/%//g
    1,$s/;$//g
    1,$s/\/os.environ/g
    1,$s/defined //g

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  • Add 1,$s/{/:/g 1,$s/}//g This might give the edge for converting case and loop blocks of code :)
    – L__
    Jul 6, 2015 at 18:22
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the best "tool" to convert Perl to Python is still yourself :). Learn the syntax of Python and how it works from Python docs. Then do the conversion manually. for example, Perl makes use of regex a lot, however, in Python, string manipulation is so easy that most of the time, regex is not needed. How would a converter know this beforehand?? There are also many ways to do things in Perl, so how would a converter know what is the best with Python equivalents ? therefore, manual conversion is still the best way to go

If you are interested, you can take a look at this book Also of interest, Pleac

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    "Perl makes use of regex a lot, however, in Python, string manipulation is so easy that most of the time, regex is not needed"? Seriously? Apr 8, 2010 at 5:29
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    The only reason why string manipulation in python seems easy is because it's harder to do the more complicated string manipulations, so people generally don't.
    – Michael
    Apr 8, 2010 at 5:36
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    I don't know Python well enough to comment on its differences from Perl, buuuuuut... As a general rule, "I can't explain the answer unless you already know enough that I won't have to explain it" is a cop-out answer which reeks of "I don't really know what I'm talking about." Any topic you can't at least explain to a layman in broad terms is a topic that you don't fully understand yourself. Apr 8, 2010 at 10:59
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    Looking at the PLEAC stuff, what we have here is a case of a rote translation of a technique from one language causing another to look bad. For example, its rare in Perl to work character-by-character. Why? For one, its a pain in the ass. A fair cop. For another, you can usually do it faster and easier with a regex. One can reverse the OP's statement and say "in Perl, regexes are so easy that most of the time other string manipulation is not needed". Anyhow, the OP's sentiment is correct. You do things differently in Perl than in Python so a rote translator would produce nasty code.
    – Schwern
    Apr 8, 2010 at 11:47
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    One of the reasons why Perl programs use regexes instead of string manipulation is because it is faster. It is also probably more correct than direct string manipulation if you are dealing with Unicode. Jan 31, 2013 at 4:16
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Converting would require writing a Perl parser, semantic checker, and Python code generator.

Not practical. Perl parsers are hard enough for the Perl teams to get right. You'd be better off translating Perl to Python from the Perl AST (opcodes) using the Perl Opcode or related modules.

http://perldoc.perl.org/Opcode.html

Some notations do not map from Perl to Python without some work. Perl's closures are different, for example. So is its regex support.

In short, either convert it by hand, or use some integration modules to call Python from Perl or vice-versa.

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