I was asked to write a code translator that would take a Python program and produce a C program. Do you have any ideas how could I approach this problem or is it even possible?

Thanks, Boda Cydo.

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I'm hesitant to second-guess your needs without hearing more, but if you "were asked to write a code translator" (by someone like one of my worst bosses), that suggests a misunderstanding at some level. My initial reaction is that (a) someone thinks "Python=slow, C=fast" always, and (b) a code translator for Python would be an easy thing to write. I'd go back and ask why they want this. – Ken Mar 26 '10 at 18:01
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4 Answers

There's a fundamental question here: is the intent to basically create a Python compiler that uses C as a back-end, or to convert the program to C and maintain the C afterward?

Writing a compiler that produces (really ugly) C as its output probably isn't trivial -- a compiler rarely is, and generating code for Python will be more difficult than for a lot of other languages (dynamic typing, in particular, is hard to compile, at least to very efficient output). OTOH, at least the parser will be a lot easier than for some languages.

If by "translating", you mean converting Python to C that's readable and maintainable, that's a whole different question -- it's substantially more difficult, to put it mildly. Realistically, I doubt any machine translation will be worth much -- there are just too large of differences in how you normally approach problems in Python and C for there to be much hope of a decent machine translation.

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+1: Python is not C with a different Syntax. It's a fundamentally different language with unique semantics. If it was "C with a different syntax", someone would already have written that transformation. – S.Lott Mar 26 '10 at 18:14
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Have a look at Shedskin. It does exactly that (well, to C++ and for a subset of Python and its modules). But it should be able to provide valuable insight as how to approach this particular problem (although writing your own will certainly not be a trivial task).

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Thank you, Christopher. I will study the source code of Shedskin now. – bodacydo Mar 26 '10 at 18:00
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It's hard to believe that nobody has mentioned Cython -- pretty much the de facto standard for this type of job, in my opinion: http://www.cython.org/

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