On Thu, 12 Jan 2006, Burge Kurt wrote:
> How can I use calloc in python ? Before computing and processing my data > I want to know how many bytes are available? Hi Burge, There's no concept of manual memory allocation in Python, and we don't have direct access to calloc/malloc/free. You're asking a lot of C-ish questions: have you looked through the Python Tutorial to get aquainted with the language yet? See: http://www.python.org/doc/tut/ One of the main distinctions between Python and C is that Python programming has a very dynamic feel to it. Program properties that may be static in other languages are fairly dynamic in Python. For example, rather than predefine a line buffer to read lines from a file, we use the readline() method of a file, which itself dynamically expands if the line is very long. The small program: ###### file = open("/etc/passwd") for line in file: print line ###### does what you might expect: it displays every line in the file. Note here that there are no hardcoded places where we've defined how long line must be. (An equivalent C program would be slightly more difficult to write unless we changed its semantics to read the file character-by-character or block-by-block where each unit is the same size, rather than line-by-line where each line's length can vary.) All the memory allocation and deallocation is handed by the Python runtime. Regions of memory that no longer are reachable are freed by garbage collection (or reference counting). This GC scheme reduces the chance of making silly memory-related errors such as double-free or memory leaking. _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor