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I know a bunch of scripting languages, (python, ruby, lua, php) but I don't know any compiled languages like C/C++ , I wanted to try and speed up some python code using cython, which is essentially a python -> C compiler, aimed at creating C extensions for python. Basically you code in a stricter version of python which compiles into C -> native code.

here's the problem, I don't know C, yet the cython documentation is aimed at people who obviously already know C (nothing is explained, only presented), and is of no help to me, I need to know if there are any good cython tutorials aimed at python programmers, or if I'm gonna have to learn C before I learn Cython.

bear in mind I'm a competent python programmer, i would much rather learn cython from the perspective of the language I'm already good at, rather than learn a whole new language in order to learn cython.

1) PLEASE don't recommend psyco

edit: ANY information that will help understand the oficial cython docs is useful information

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  • i just want to learn cython from a python users perspective, ie: with all the "C stuff" explained, rather than just presented. thanks.
    – spearfire
    Oct 17, 2009 at 12:53
  • So you want to use C without learning C? Is that what you're asking? Are you asking for a "royal road" to C that doesn't involve learning anything? What programming problem do you have? Is that you need to read C or need to write C? I don't get the question.
    – S.Lott
    Oct 17, 2009 at 14:21
  • @spearfire, I have the same question and I got the same answer. and... I still don't wanna see the K&R book. after learning Python, it's pain to read this(or whatever C) book.
    – sunqiang
    Jan 9, 2010 at 12:39
  • C sucks for all but embeded development and Operating Systems (which support nothing better). C++ is a great language to learn. But it requires much learning about Computer architecture.
    – unixman83
    Dec 14, 2010 at 23:50
  • Maybe too late but I found this reference " Cython - A guide for Python programmers" from Kurt W. Smith
    – TMoover
    Jan 26, 2016 at 16:32

7 Answers 7

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cython is good at two different things

  1. Interfacing with C language libraries
  2. Speeding up Python code

It probably gets more exposure from 1. hence the emphasis on the tutorial materials you've found towards C stuff. It sounds like you want to use it like 2. though.

From my experience with cython you can just try compiling your python programs and see if it works. It will get a bit faster (maybe). To get a lot faster you need to selectively turn python types into C types. This starts to bring out the power of cython.

If you look at the official tutorial you need to study where they've used the cdef keyword.

So to recap

  1. Make your existing python program compile with cython with as few changes as possible
  2. Declare some variables as cdef and make it work again
  3. If not fast enough go to step 2.

I'm sorry that isn't a pointer to a tutorial, but it should give you a direction to go in!

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  • thanks a lot, i also wondered if maybe there's a C tutorial on the basic structure of C that will help understand the offical cython docs better
    – spearfire
    Oct 17, 2009 at 12:50
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Learn C! (Sorry -- irresistible.)

Seriously, though, it seems like you mostly need to know about C variable types (C types, if you will) in order to use cdef effectively.

Later on, if you do decide to bite the bullet and learn C properly, treat yourself to a copy of Kernighan and Ritchie, or K & R, available on Amazon.

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  • ths is how it has to be i guess, i just wanted to know if there was hope. thanks anyway. p.s python is useless for "real world" stuff
    – spearfire
    Oct 17, 2009 at 17:33
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    I don't think python is useless for real world stuff. Off the top of my head, I know Pixar uses it for a core piece of their operation.
    – Ewan Todd
    Oct 18, 2009 at 16:48
  • Python is generally not great for things that are really performance dependent. But there are plenty of programs where speed is really not that important, or where it is important but where other things are the bottle neck. Such as with websites where http requests and the like are the bottle neck and the python runs in a small fraction of a second. Cython / C dependencies can allow Python to still work for performance dependent programs, but vanilla Python will really struggle.
    – semicolon
    May 17, 2015 at 9:01
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Have you seen this: http://www.perrygeo.net/wordpress/?p=116 seems like a pretty good overview. You could also have a look at the source in pyzmq and gevent - they use Cython for their core code.

Ben

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  • Your link is dead. Do you remember if it pointed to this article?
    – fenceop
    Jun 6, 2017 at 15:07
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Cython does support concurrency (you can use native POSIX threads with c, that can be compiled in extent ion module) , you just need to be careful enough to not to modify any python objects when GIL is released and keep in mind the interpreter itself is not thread safe. You can also use multiprocessing with python to use more cores for parallelism which can in turn use your compiled cython extensions to speed up even more. But all in all you definitely have to know c programming model , static types etc

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You can do a lot of very useful things with Cython if you can answer the following C quiz...

(1) What is a double? What is an int?

(2) What does the word "compile" mean?

(3) What is a header (.h) file?

To answer these questions you don't need to read a whole C book! ...maybe chapter 1.

Once you can pass that quiz, try again with the tutorial.

What I usually do is start with pure python code, and add Cython elements bit by bit. In that situation, you can learn the Cython features bit by bit. For example I don't understand C strings, because so far I have not tried to cythonize code that involves strings. When I do, I will first look up how strings work in C, and then second look up how strings work in Cython.

Again, once you've gotten started with Cython, you will now and then run into some complication that requires learning slightly more C. And of course the more C you know, the more dextrous you will be with taking full advantage of Cython, not to mention troubleshooting if something goes wrong. But that shouldn't make you reluctant to start!

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Cython does not support threads well at all. It holds the GIL (Global Intrepreter Lock) the entire time! This makes your code thread-safe by (virtually) disabling concurrent execution. So I wouldn't use it for general purpose development.

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  • That's not true. Under certain conditions, you could add nogil to the function signature or blocks of code.
    – hlin117
    Sep 13, 2015 at 23:03
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About all the C that you really need to know is:

  1. C types are much faster than Python types (adding to C ints or doubles can be done in a single clock cycle) but less safe (they are not arbitrarily sized and may silently overflow).
  2. C function (cdef) calls are much faster than Python (def) function calls (but are less flexible).

This will get you most of the way there. If you want to eke out that last 10-20% speedup for most applications, there's no getting around knowing C, and how modern processes work (pointers, cache, ...).

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