On 5/29/06, "Martin v. Löwis" <martin at v.loewis.de> wrote: > I agree using Py_ssize_t would be a "smaller" change, and one that > likely has less performance impact. It would still be a large change, > and should be only done if we know for sure we don't want it to be > a 64-bit type always the next day. Well, implementing PyInt in terms of a new symbolic type, even if it defaults to 64-bit, should make choosing it to be a 32-bit type a lot easier, shouldn't it? Not that I think defaulting PyInt to use 'long long' is a good thing, considering we still only compile 'long long' support optionally. Better to stick with a common native type until all machines have 64-bit registers. Better for performance, too. But switching PyInts to use (a symbolic type of the same size as) Py_ssize_t means that, when the time comes that 32-bit architectures are rare, Win64 isn't left as the only platform (barring other LLP64 systems) that has slow 33-to-64-bit Python numbers (because they'd be PyLongs there, even though the platform has 64-bit registers.) Given the timeframe and the impact, though, perhaps we should just do it -- now -- in the p3yk branch and forget about 2.x; gives people all the more reason to switch, two years from now. -- Thomas Wouters <thomas at python.org> Hi! I'm a .signature virus! copy me into your .signature file to help me spread! -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/attachments/20060529/5a5311f3/attachment.html
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