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I'd like to do some real life benchmark comparing cpython+cython performances vs a pure pypy implementation.

I have a quite big cython codebase (proprietary), with a good test coverage and some benchmarks, what I'd like to do is to test cython performances against pypy, but what I miss is a fast way to share the code.

  • Is there some tool to strip all type annotations and convert back a cython codebase to a pure python one?

  • Or is there some parser extension in pypy to accept cython code ignoring all the type annotations? (or even use them...)

  • Other options?

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  • It sounds like you're using Cython as an accelerator. While this is a perfectly valid use-case, it's important to recognize that it's not the only use case. Cython is also designed to interface easily with C code, and that would be nontrivial to translate (into the equivalent ctypes/CFFI calls). So a general-purpose tool would be more complicated than I think you may be imagining it to be.
    – Kevin
    Mar 8, 2015 at 5:21
  • There is pure-Python mode: docs.cython.org/src/tutorial/pure.html.
    – Veedrac
    Mar 8, 2015 at 21:14
  • @Kevin you are right, in this specific case there are some sip (the PyQt one) wrapped C++ classes, but a very limited number. In that case cpyext should be enough. And 80% working converter (the easy 80%, leaving the hard 80% left as exercise) could be a good starting point.
    – naufraghi
    Mar 8, 2015 at 22:40
  • At that point, you're going to be maintaining a copy of the pure-Python module in version control anyway, so the tool is significantly less useful. You can just go through and manually strip out all the cdefs; a short Perl script could probably do it.
    – Kevin
    Mar 9, 2015 at 3:51
  • @Kevin I was in fact searching for that kind of tool, a brute script to do a bare one-shot benchmark.
    – naufraghi
    Mar 10, 2015 at 17:26

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