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....1. Major new features of the 3.3 series, compared to 3.2 Python 3.3 includes a range of improvements of the 3.x series, as well as easier porting between 2.x and 3.x. PEP 380, syntax for delegating to a subgenerator (yield from) PEP 393, flexible string representation (doing away with the distinction between "wide" and "narrow" Unicode builds) A C implementation of the "decimal" module, with up to 120x speedup for decimal-heavy applications The import system (__i...
Minutes of the PSF Member Meeting at PyConDC 2004 <h1>Minutes of the 2004 member meeting</h1> The members of the Python Software Foundation (the "Corporation") held its annual meeting on March 25, 2004 at the George Washington University's Cafritz Center in Washington, D.C. Jeremy Hylton, secretary and treasurer, presided over the meeting. The following members attended the meeting: <ul> <li>David Ascher (also representing ActiveState) <li>Steve Holden &...
Python 3.3.3 Release Python 3.3.x has reached end-of-life. Python 3.3.7, the final security-fix release, is available here. Python 3.3.3 was released on November 17th, 2013. This release fixes several security issues and various other bugs found in Python 3.3.2. This release fully supports OS X 10.9 Mavericks. In particular, this release fixes an issue that could cause previous versions of Python to crash when typing in interactive mode on OS X 10.9. Major new features of the 3.3 series, c...
Python 3.3.4 Release Python 3.3.x has reached end-of-life. Python 3.3.7, the final security-fix release, is available here. Python 3.3.4 was released on February 9th, 2014. This release fixes several security and a lot of overall bug fixes found in Python 3.3.3. This release fully supports OS X 10.9 Mavericks. In particular, this release fixes an issue that could cause previous versions of Python to crash when typing in interactive mode on OS X 10.9. Major new features of the 3.3 series, c...
....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 Committee 6 Pre-Finance & Underwrite Python Brochure 7 Fund 2010 Summer pyGames Competi...
....1 Communication Status 5.2 Honorary Associate Membership WebPages/Links 5.3 Infrastructure Committee 5.4 Marketing Material 5.5 Moving PyPI to Amazon CloudFront 5.6 Sprint Committee 5.7 Trademarks Committee (TMC) 6 2012/2013 PyCon Chair Appointment 7 2012/2013 PyCon Conference Hotel Contract 8 2011 Election of Board Officers ...
....1 Increased Compensation for the Treasurer 3.2 Hiring an Administrator 3.3 PyCon Chair Contract 4 Status of Past Action Items 4.1 Carried Forward 4.2 New from November 10 5 Role of Administrator 6 Bylaws Revision Timetable 7 Introduction & Support for OBOOE 8 Server Replacement Proposal 9 PyCon Report 1...
....1.3, a popular third party compression library used by some Python modules. The hole was quickly plugged in zlib-1.1.4, and the Windows build of Python now ships with zlib-1.1.4. pwd, grp, and resource return enhanced tuples now, with symbolic field names. array.array is now a type object. A new format character 'u' indicates Py_UNICODE arrays. For those, .tounicode and .fromunicode methods are available. Arrays now support __iadd__ and __imul__. dl now builds on every system that has dlfcn...
....1.1" all over it, wondering whether it applies only to Python 2.1.1. The official name of the new license is the Python Software Foundation License Version 2. Core and builtins Bug #1055820 Cyclic garbage collection was not protecting against that calling a live weakref to a piece of cyclic trash could resurrect an insane mutation of the trash if any Python code ran during gc (via running a dead object's __del__ method, running another callback on a weakref to a dead object, or via any ...
....1 Fund PyLadies Community 3.2 2011 PyCon Chair Authorization 4 Treasurer Report 5 Progress Reports 5.1 Communication Status 5.2 Honorary Associate Membership WebPages/Links 5.3 Infrastructure Committee 5.4 Marketing Material 5.5 Moving PyPI to Amazon CloudFront 5.6 PyCon Chair 5.7 Sprint Committee 5.8 &n...
....1MB TIFF). Internal Revenue Service Date: May 6, 2004 Python Software Foundation c/o Zone Corporation 513 Prince Edward ST Fredericksberg, VA 22401-5742 Department of the Treasury P. 0. Box 2508 Cincinnati. OH 45201 Person to Contact: Ms. Dalton 31-07967 Customer Service Representative Toll Free Telephone Number: 8:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. EST 877-829-5500 Fax Number: 513-263-3756 Federal Identification Number: 04-3594598 Dear Sir...
Python Software Foundation: Minutes of Board of Directors Meeting (August 12, 2003) The Python Software Foundation Minutes of Regular Meeting of the Board of Directors August 12, 2003 A regular meeting of the Python Software Foundation (the "PSF") Board of Directors was held over Internet Relay Chat at 10:00 PDT. 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 a...
Python Software Foundation: Minutes of Board of Directors Meeting (March 26, 2004) The Python Software Foundation Minutes of Special Meeting of the Board of Directors Draft March 26, 2004 A special meeting of the Python Software Foundation (the "PSF") Board of Directors (the "Board") was held during PyCon, at the George Washington University Cafritz Center, at noon. Jeremy Hylton, secretary of the PSF, presided. 1. Attendance This was the first meeting of the Board with the newly elec...
Python Software Foundation: Minutes of Board of Directors Meeting (October 12, 2004) The Python Software Foundation Minutes of Regular Meeting of the Board of Directors October 12, 2004 A regular meeting of the Python Software Foundation (the "PSF") Board of Directors was held over Internet Relay Chat at 17:00 GMT. Stephan Deibel presided at the meeting. 1. Attendance The following members of the Board of Directors were present at the meeting: Jeremy Hylton, Guido van Rossum, Stephan D...
Python Software Foundation: Minutes of Board of Directors Meeting (May 10, 2005) The Python Software Foundation Minutes of Regular Meeting of the Board of Directors May 10, 2005 A regular meeting of the Python Software Foundation (the "PSF") Board of Directors was held over Internet Relay Chat at 17:00 GMT. Stephan Deibel presided at the meeting. 1. Attendance The following members of the Board of Directors were present at the meeting: David Ascher, Stephan Deibel, Tim Peters, Andrew K...
Pi-thon 2022 PSF Spring Fundraiser Pi-thon 2022 PSF Spring Fundraiser Launching on a very special day on the calendar, we invite you to honor the PSF and our favorite Greek letter and irrational number with a gift to support the Python ecosystem. ALL donors who give any multiple of 𝛑 will receive a special digital 𝛑SF swag bag. Show your love for our Python community and contribute to the Spring Fundraiser by May 3rd to get your slice of the pi! We aren’t setting a spec...
Python Success Stories Introduction Internet connectivity is omnipresent, finding new applications and giving old designs a new lease on life. In this age of small IC devices boasting TCP/IP stacks and wireless connectivity, one no longer needs a standalone PC to harness the Web. VAHNZ Controls developed its eBukal[1] remote alarm device to leverage their knowledge of microcontroller interfacing and Internet protocols, creating an innovative solution for the field of building automation. Re...
Python Success Stories Introduction TTTech, founded in 1998, focuses on developing a technology for safety-critical real-time systems. Our central technology is the Time-Triggered Protocol (TTP), a communication protocol used in embedded systems for distributed fault-tolerant applications, such as drive-by-wire and fly-by-wire vehicles. For TTP, we provide chip models for implementing the necessary hardware in silicon, services to customers using the technology, and a broad range of tools. ...
Bugs in Python 2.3.2 <h3>Bugs in Python 2.3.2</h3> <ul> <li>IDLE now executes code in a separate process. To communicate between the main process and executing processes, IDLE opens a socket to 127.0.0.1 (the local machine). Some firewalls running on Windows machines interfere with this and can cause either silent failures or erroneous popup windows from the firewall. This problem only occurs if you run a firewall on the same machine as IDLE.</li> </ul> &...
....17 (on October 19th, 2019) and January 1st. As a service to the community, we bundled those fixes (and only those fixes) and released a 2.7.18. We did that in April 2020, because that was convenient for the release managers, not because it implied anything about when support ended. For more technical details, please see this explanation. What will happen if I did not upgrade by January 1st, 2020? If people find catastrophic security problems in Python 2, or in software written in Python 2, then...
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