Notice: While JavaScript is not essential for this website, your interaction with the content will be limited. Please turn JavaScript on for the full experience.
...5.22/1012. This Agreement may also be obtained from a proxy server on the Internet using the following URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1895.22/1012".</p> <p>3. In the event Licensee prepares a derivative work that is based on or incorporates Python 1.6 or any part thereof, and wants to make the derivative work available to others as provided herein, then Licensee hereby agrees to include in any such work a brief summary of the changes made to Python 1.6.</p> <p>4. CNRI i...
...3:10 UTC) in the Marriott Quorum Hotel in Dallas/Addison, Texas, USA (PyCon TX 2006). Stephan Deibel presided over the meeting. David Goodger prepared these minutes. Contents 1 Attendance 2 Review of the Year 2.1 Financial Review 2.2 Grants Process 2.3 PyCon Report 3 Elections 3.1 New Nominated Members 3.2 New Sponsor Member 3.3 New Board o...
...3 Status of Past Action Items 3.1 Follow-Up Required Originally from November 2005, follow-up from December 2005: D. Goodger is to contact a potential PSF sponsor/donor. Status: follow-up required. Originally from November 2005, follow-up from December 2005: S. Holden is to contact a potential PSF sponsor/donor. Status: follow-up required. (Task transferred from D. Ascher.) Originally from November 2005, Section 8, Trademark Policy: S. Deibel to work on the...
Location: London, Greater London United Kingdom
Mid-Senior Python Developers Hybrid (1 day a week in London) | Full-time Salary £65,000 to £95,000 DOE Are you an experienced Python Developer who loves solving real-world problems with clean, scalable code? Gravitas has partnered with an established insurtech company that’s reshaping the future of insurance through data and automation. …
...3) The Python Software Foundation Minutes of Regular Meeting of the Board of Directors January 14, 2003. A regular meeting of the Python Software Foundation (the "PSF") Board of Directors was held over Internet Relay Chat at 13:08 EST. Guido van Rossum, president of the Foundation and chairman of the Board, presided at the meeting. 1. Attendance The following members of the Board of Directors were present at the meeting: Jeremy Hylton, Tim Peters, Guido van Rossum, Thomas Wouters, Marc-...
...3. Committee charters The Board voted unanimously to re-appoint the Python Conference Committee and the Public Support Committee. (There was some discussion about whether any action was necessary; regardless of the need, it seemed appropriate.) Marc-Andre Lemburg resigned as chair of the Public Support Committee earlier, and Deibel was appointed chair to replace him. The Python Website Committee was dissolved by unanimous vote. The Board intends to create a new committee to manage the web s...
...5, 2005) The Python Software Foundation Minutes of Special Meeting of the Board of Directors March 25, 2005 A special meeting of the Python Software Foundation (the "PSF") Board of Directors was held at George Washington University on March 25 at noon. Stephan Deibel presided. Jeremy Hylton recorded the minutes. 1. Attendance A quorum was present. All board members and treasurer Neal Norwitz attended the meeting. David Ascher arrived late, because he was not informed of the meeting ...
...5-0-2 vote (in favor – opposed – abstentions). The 23 February 2007 members' meeting minutes were approved by a 4-0-3 vote. The 25 February 2007 Board meeting minutes were approved by a 4-0-3 vote. 3 Status of Past Action Items (Pending action items appear like this.) 3.1 Carried Forward The following are action items carried forward from the 12 February 2007 meeting, as highlighted in the minutes (Section 3, Status of Past Action Items): Originally from Oct...
Version: None
Released: March 14, 2025
Here comes the penultimate alpha. This is an early developer preview of Python 3.14 Major new features of the 3.14 series, compared to 3.13 Python 3.14 is still in development. This release, 3.14.0a6, is the sixth of seven planned alpha releases. Alpha releases are intended to make it easier to …
View Release Notes
...3 Reports 3.1 Board Report 3.2 Treasurer Reports 4 Announcements 5 New Business 5.1 Introduction to the new PSF membership model 5.2 Information for Voting Members 5.3 New Concept: Workgroups 5.4 Moving the PSF outside the US 5.5 Contributing members and large Python projects 6 Voting 7 Any ...
Released: Sept. 12, 2016
Python 3.6.0b1 Python 3.6.0b1 was released on 2016-09-12. Major new features of the 3.6 series, compared to 3.5 Python 3.6 is still in development; 3.6.0b1 is the first of four planned beta releases. Among the new major new features in Python 3.6 are: PEP 468, Preserving Keyword Argument Order …
Released: Oct. 10, 2016
Python 3.6.0b2 Python 3.6.0b2 was released on 2016-10-10. Major new features of the 3.6 series, compared to 3.5 Python 3.6 is still in development; 3.6.0b2 is the second of four planned beta releases. Among the new major new features in Python 3.6 are: PEP 468, Preserving Keyword Argument Order …
Released: Oct. 31, 2016
Python 3.6.0b3 Python 3.6.0b3 was released on 2016-10-31. Major new features of the 3.6 series, compared to 3.5 Python 3.6 is still in development; 3.6.0b3 is the third of four planned beta releases. Among the new major new features in Python 3.6 are: PEP 468, Preserving Keyword Argument Order …
Released: Nov. 21, 2016
Python 3.6.0b4 Python 3.6.0b4 was released on 2016-11-21. Major new features of the 3.6 series, compared to 3.5 Python 3.6 is still in development; 3.6.0b4 is the final planned beta release. Among the new major new features in Python 3.6 are: PEP 468, Preserving Keyword Argument Order PEP 487 …
Released: Dec. 6, 2016
Python 3.6.0rc1 Python 3.6.0rc1 was released on 2016-12-06. 3.6.0rc1 is the first release candidate for the 3.6.0 release. Code for 3.6.0 is now frozen. Assuming no release critical problems are found prior to the 3.6.0 final release date, currently 2016-12-16, the 3.6.0 final release will be the same code base …
Released: Dec. 16, 2016
Python 3.6.0rc2 Python 3.6.0rc2 was released on 2016-12-16. 3.6.0rc2 is the second release candidate for the 3.6.0 release. Code for 3.6.0 is now frozen. Assuming no release critical problems are found prior to the 3.6.0 final release date, currently 2016-12-23, the 3.6.0 final release will be the same code base …
...3a397c30fa7c03526a413e28a3bcbd02462...24a5abbde0b938492f6dcdaa5781388b9932fa72, to be voted on by the membership during the next election. Approved 13-0-0, April 14, 2021 RESOLVED, that the Python Software Foundation board approve the bylaw implementation of 'Section 5.5.2 Term Limits for Directors' as proposed here https://github.com/VanL/psf-bylaws/compare/9666a3a397c30fa7c03526a413e28a3bcbd02462...da8924850047d112e270435baef4a71b69789add, to be voted on by the membership during the next elec...
...3 August 2007 Board meeting minutes were approved by a 4-0-1 vote (in favor – opposed – abstentions). 3 Status of Past Action Items (Pending action items appear like this.) 3.1 Carried Forward The following are action items carried forward from the 13 August 2007 meeting, as highlighted in the minutes (Section 3, Status of Past Action Items): Originally from October 2005, Section 4, Public Support Committee: D. Goodger will pursue web page and installer dona...
...5-0-1 vote (in favor – opposed – abstentions). 3 Status of Past Action Items (Pending action items appear like this.) 3.1 Carried Forward The following are action items carried forward from the 9 April 2007 meeting, as highlighted in the minutes (Section 3, Status of Past Action Items): Originally from October 2005, Section 4, Public Support Committee: D. Goodger will pursue web page and installer donation link ideas. Status: carried forward. Originally fro...
...3 Votes Taken Between Meetings 4 Treasurer Report 5 Progress Report 5.1 Communication Status 5.2 Core Development Tasks 5.3 HAM WebPages/Links 5.4 Infrastructure Committee 5.5 Marketing Material 5.6 Moving PyPI to Amazon CloudFront 5.7 PyCon US Website 5.8 Sprint Committee 5.9 Trademarks Committ...
If you didn't find what you need, try your search in the Python language documentation.