This reverts commit 403442d6b1.
It turns out that without `get_version` in `data_files`, trying to install Hy from a setuptools-produced source distribution fails with an error that `get_version` can't be found.
os.walk need not provide its results in any specific order. So, sorting might help with situations like that described in #1280. Even if not, it could help avoid some very mysterious bugs in the future that arise from different orders in which Hy's modules are imported.
Importing or executing a Hy file now loads the byte-compiled version if it exists and is up to date, and if not, the source is byte-compiled after it's parsed.
This change can speed up Hy a lot. Here are some examples comparing run times of the current master (491b474e) to this commit, on my laptop with Python 3.6:
- `nosetests --exclude='test_bin'` goes from 3.8 s to 0.7 s (a 5-fold speedup)
- `hy -c '(print "hello world")` goes from 0.47 s to 0.20 s (a 2-fold speedup)
- Rogue TV's startup goes from 3.6 s to 0.4 s (a 9-fold speedup)
Accompanying changes include:
- `setup.py` now creates and installs bytecode for `hy.core`, `hy.contrib`, and `hy.extra`.
- The `hyc` command under Python 3 now creates bytecode in `__pycache__`, as usual for Python 3, instead of putting the `.pyc` right next to the source file like Python 2 does.
I've removed a test of `hy.extra.anaphoric.a-if` that triggers #1268 when the test file is byte-compiled and then hits some weird `macroexpand` bug or something when I try to work around that—Nose crashes when trying to produce an error message, and I can't seem to replicate the bug without Nose.
`hy --spy` fails on hy 0.9.11.
$ hy --spy
hy 0.9.11
=> (type "hy")
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/hy/cmdline.py", line 68, in print_python_code
import astor.codegen
ImportError: No module named astor.codegen
- PEP8 fixes
- Use setuptools.find_packages()
- Update PyPI classifiers
- Update website URL
- Install the argparse module in Python 2.6 and before
- Delete the duplicate rply in install_requires. With the PyPI
version, tests are failed.