Code review?

Bayram Güçlü byrmgcl at yandex.com.tr
Tue Jan 14 02:29:56 EST 2014


On 14-01-2014 11:22, Bob Martin wrote:
> in 714500 20140113 233415 Chris Angelico <rosuav at gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Tue, Jan 14, 2014 at 7:43 AM, Steven D'Aprano <steve at pearwood.info> wrote:
>>> On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 03:40:25 +1100, Chris Angelico wrote:
>>>
>>>> Incidentally, is there a reason you're using Python 2.6? You should be
>>>> able to upgrade at least to 2.7, and Flask ought to work fine on 3.3
>>>> (the current stable Python). If it's the beginning of your project, and
>>>> you have nothing binding you to Python 2, go with Python 3. Converting a
>>>> small project now will save you the job of converting a big project in
>>>> ten years' time
>>>
>>> Everything you say is correct, but remember that there is a rather large
>>> ecosystem of people writing code to run on servers where the supported
>>> version of Python is 2.6, 2.5, 2.4 and even 2.3. RedHat, for example,
>>> still has at least one version of RHEL still under commercial support
>>> where the system Python is 2.3, at least that was the case a few months
>>> back, it may have reached end-of-life by now. But 2.4 will definitely
>>> still be under support.
>>
>> Pledging that your app will run on the system Python of RHEL is
>> something that binds you to a particular set of versions of Python.
>> It's not just library support that does that.
>
> Does any Linux distro ship with Python 3?  I haven't seen one.
>
Debian GNU/Linux

https://wiki.debian.org/Python/Python3.3



More information about the Python-list mailing list