The Incredible Growth of Python (stackoverflow.blog)

Leam Hall leamhall at gmail.com
Tue Sep 12 07:34:16 EDT 2017


On 09/12/2017 07:27 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 12, 2017 at 9:20 PM, Leam Hall <leamhall at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Hey Chris,
>>
>> This is an area the Python community can improve on. Even I would encourage
>> someone new to Python and wanting to do webdev to use Python 3.
>>
>> But if someone comes onto the list, or IRC, and says they need to stay on
>> Python 2 then please drop the dozens of e-mails and comments about
>> upgrading. Help the person learn; that makes them happier with Python and
>> when the time comes to switch to Python 3 they probably will.
> 
> If you read back in my emails, you may find that I actually wasn't
> telling you to upgrade to Python 3 - just to Python 2.7, which is an
> easy upgrade from 2.6, and gives you the security fixes and other
> improvements that come from using a supported version of the language.
> Is it "hostile" to tell people to upgrade like that? If someone is
> using Python 3.2 today, I'm going to strongly recommend upgrading to
> the latest 3.x. If someone's using Windows 98, I'm not going to say
> "well, here's how to get everything working under Win98", I'm going to
> say "upgrade to a better OS".
> 
> If that's hostile, I am not sorry to be hostile. At some point, you
> have to either get onto something supported, or do all the support
> work yourself.
> 
> ChrisA
> 

Hey Chris; only some folks were overtly hostile.  :)

Yet look at your answer; "upgrade". For a person working on a server 
there's usually no economic choice to do. The OS python must stay in 
place and the newly installed upgrade must be personally maintained, 
updated, and tested when security patches come out. For one desktop 
that's not an issue. For dozens, or hundreds, or thousands, its not 
likely to happen.

I stand by my position; accept the "no" and move forward. Let "no" mean 
"no".

Leam



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