In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
 "Hugh Perkins" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> However, using Swig etc to join Python to C++ takes a significant
> amount of time, and one needs project members now to learn two
> languages.

That's a non-issue in my context. The first real problem is wasting time 
generating glue code. The second problem is interrupting the current 
work to correct the bindings, or the underlying code itself. The ability 
to correct, inspect and debug all the code at runtime without ever 
stopping almost outweighs the language capabilities or syntax. If 
elegance weren't an issue ;), I would solely use lisp, or maybe some 
scheme, or maybe even CINT.

> Then I discovered a different language (not Haskell) that combined the
> ease of Python with the speed of C++.  It's really a big advantage.

Is that something originally coming from digital mars? The list of 
languages that argue to have that target performance is quite long... ;)

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