surya k wrote:
I don't understand why python doesn't provide executable files for the
source code.

I am afraid that you are confused. Python source code *are* executable. They
would hardly be *programming* code if you can't execute them.

They're just not stand-alone executable. They require a virtual machine
environment to execute, just like Flash, .Net, Java, Javascript, Perl, PHP,
.ASP, and hundreds of other languages.

I am using py2exe for building executables and I found that, it doesn't
completely change code into binary but creates dll files and python
libraries to run that particular code. This process makes program very
large although it isn't.

I am afraid you are again working under a misunderstanding. The program *is* very large because most of the "smarts" is in the virtual machine environment. The source code on its own is small, but it doesn't do anything without the environment.

Again, this is how Java works, and .Net, and Flash, to say nothing of other languages. The Java Runtime Environment (JRE) for Java 5 is 15 MB; the .Net 3.5 runtime is 197 MB. A small py2exe bundle is 6 MB.


Python offers a rich, safe environment for the programmer, and that requires a rich, complex feature set. Programming in Python isn't just flipping bits and adding numbers. That requires a large infrastructure to support it. In 1984 the Macintosh API was maybe 100 functions; today, plain Python is probably fifty times larger than that, and if you add graphics perhaps 500 times larger. Do you think you get this code for free? It has to be *somewhere*.


1. Why doesn't python doesn't offer executable file ?

If you mean a stand-alone, minimal application like you used to get back in 1980 when hand-coding the absolute least amount of C or Pascal code that could be compiled to do the job, well, that's a hard thing to do, and it is unnecessary, so it doesn't get done.


2. If one wants to
make a commercial software using python, how can he hide the code?

There is lots of commercial code which is open source. Just ask Ubuntu and Red Hat for starters.

Why do you want to hide the code? What are you afraid of?

Tell us what your fear is, and we can perhaps help you.


However, if one wants to make an open source software, as python doesn't
offer executable files, how people make those so as to distribute their
products to people?

You just make the Python runtime environment a requirement, exactly as people do with other languages.




--
Steven

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