Is IronPython suitable for replacing CPython?

Did IronPython get a point where you can simply replace it by replacing CPython?

To clarify: I mean that IronPython can run applications originally written for CPython (of course, there is no .NET)

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3 answers

Yes, pretty much, at least on Windows with the "real" (Microsoft) .NET under it. If you are dependent on C-encoded extensions, it is possible that ironclad may free you; you get 2.6 support, almost every standard CPython library or a third-party extension module (maybe not trivial for those encoded in Fortran or C ++, but this is a minority), plus, of course, every .NET module on the planet is not bad compromise!

How well this works with Mono on MacOSX or Linux is another problem ...

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