7% is massive for C, nothing for Python, and the benchmark suite is unreliable. I'd wait for independent measurements in real world applications. Python core developers are very good at writing bloated benchmark suites…
No, but Go and C++ are much easier to deploy.
7% is nothing, and the benchmark suite is notoriously unreliable. As usual, whenever a company that has done nothing at all for Python in 30 years attaches its name to the product of others, people fall over themselves…
7% is massive for C, nothing for Python, and the benchmark suite is unreliable. I'd wait for independent measurements in real world applications. Python core developers are very good at writing bloated benchmark suites…
No, but Go and C++ are much easier to deploy.
7% is nothing, and the benchmark suite is notoriously unreliable. As usual, whenever a company that has done nothing at all for Python in 30 years attaches its name to the product of others, people fall over themselves…