2012/2/26 Merlijn van Deen <valhallasw(a)arctus.nl>
I think the main problem lies with RHEL and CentOS, both of which still
ship Python 2.4. However, people running these OS'es are probably also
smart enough to be able to do a manual python build.
I hope so. :-) And what do those guys at Red Hat think about Python?
As far as I am concerned, we should maybe even bump the minimum version to
2.6, which is the version the current debian stable uses. 2.5 was released
in august 2006 (!), 2.6 in october 2008.
Strong support, I just was not brave enough to propose that directly. 2.6
is the first version with Python 3000 features backported, and it is very
close to 2.7 which may hope a longer support time. It may be a base to
write code as close to 3.x syntax as possible.
As for a date: I suggest something a few months in the
future, say july or
august. This gives people some time to update.
That's OK, I suggested 2 month for deciding the further steps, not to
deprecate 2.4 immediately.
Last but not least: not supported does not necessarily mean we have to
actively remove bits that work around quirks for a certain version; rather,
it means we won't fix bugs due to an old python version.
I would be more radical. What I would like to see is a cleaner code without
unneccessary branches, and free use of some basic tools such as conditional
(x if cond. else y) that is widely used in the world of programming. But
let's see the survey first.
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