@freemo @trinsec Based on my limited knowledge of python, the multithreading part is pretty heavy, if I recall correctly, you need a new python process to start a new thread (sounds familiar with JVM ). And go is pretty good at multithreading (I mean user-mode threads). If not limited by the IO, I would assume a go implementation will speed up some of the process. Maybe also ease the load on developers, considering go offers some great built-in multithreading structures.
As a JVM lover, I am jealous of the ability to call C code directly from CPython.
And yes, coroutine is powerful. I'm using kotlin coroutines and it's a huge (free) improvement of Java's native thread.
@freemo co-routines can run on multiple threads, where the "tasks" can yield and the thread from a pool can switch to another "task" without suspension or something. At least kotlin coroutine can, and according to sdgathman, Python can do it too. That's the ultimate free boost you can get by just switching to another tech.
But if Python can do that, then my earlier hypothesis about switching to go will give your free boost is wrong
Agreed, while python's biggest shame-to-fame is its inability to leverage multiple cpus through multithreading (or coroutines).. the flip side is that it is so trivial to interact with C-code that it makes up for that in a unique way that has its own value.
IF you need a language where you need to do a lot in C but what the convience of high-level language where you can get away with it, python is great... if you need a high level language that is cpu-intensive and effecient and easy to write without wanting to touch C, then python is a horrible choice.
Me personally, I use python a lot (just finished a 2-year project in python)... but over the years have found it just isnt a suitable language for most things, because of these very reasons.
But it looks like Jython only supports Python 2? Python 3 is still in the future...