Hi Brett, Yep, There's plenty of us! Many I know migrated from FORTH at one end and APL at the other ... the important continuity being an interpretive environ. which is more conducing to figuring out what one is actually trying to do. Having done that, we can crunch CPU cycles using C/Fortran etc libraries if needs be.
Whilst not specifically a mac thing, the python community is well entrenched nearly everywhere and there are some fantastic tools which can be integrated. Its not a single piece of software, nor even finished project, but you might like to look at my sonipy.sourceforge.net for some toolset ideas. It is being developed in the first instance on OSX. good luck! David On 04/10/2007, at 12:50 PM, Brett Calcott wrote: > Thanks to everyone for their replies; very useful stuff. > > I must say that getting a large number of replies so quickly is also > incredibly encouraging. It is good to know that there are people out > there who love python and work on the mac! > > Thanks again, > Brett > _______________________________________________ > Pythonmac-SIG maillist - Pythonmac-SIG@python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pythonmac-sig > _________________________________________________ experimental polymedia: www.avatar.com.au Sonic Communications Research Group, University of Canberra: creative.canberra.edu.au/scrg _______________________________________________ Pythonmac-SIG maillist - Pythonmac-SIG@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pythonmac-sig