On Wed, Oct 20, 2010 at 8:52 AM, Hilton Medeiros <medeiros.hilton@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wed, 20 Oct 2010 04:31:17 +0000 (UTC) Mithrandir <mithrandiragain@lavabit.com> wrote:
Max Countryman <maxc <at> me.com> writes:
I failed to find a reference, but I seem to remember the Python team
deciding at some point that they
intended to keep the name "python" for the Python 2.X binaries perpetually, and require Python 3.X to be invoked as "python3". Arch might be alone in making this change, and inconsistent with other Python distributions.
EDIT: I can't find a conclusive decision but here is one discussion on the subject: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-3000/2008-February/0...
There is any interesting conversation taking place over at Hacker News: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1808840
Ha ha! We posted at virtually the same time! (Or not...) :D
HackerNews, Slashdot, ...: - Someone post an announcement with 10 lines; - They read it (or not) and think that that is all the information behind the story; - They furiously start typing the first thing that pops in their mind; - By the time you (Mithrandir, in this case) posted a more in-depth post, the majority had already run to the next news.
Also, the... bitching there is completely nonsense. I can't believe they know Linux or even python well enough judging by what they say about developing _difficulties_ because of this move.
AFAIK, with python is easy as hell to build a local/virtual environment for any python version... I don't get it. Anyway, nothing to see there for this post, sadly.
Congratulations to Allan, devs and tus for the move!
yeah, concur... ultimately i've had few problems; the couple i did have with pyjamas/pyjs i was able to fix pretty quickly. it's amusing sensing the hostility of some comments around the net; personally it just seems like the same old same old... following upstream. i like the python2.7, python2, python3.1, python3, etc, scheme... i think this makes it very easy for developers to select the specific interpreter they need, if any. i hope this trend becomes/is defacto. if you are just running `python`, you should be prepared for the environment ambiguity it entails. C Anthony