Le lundi 16 février 2009 à 22:33 +0100, Matthias Klose a écrit : > "current" is also useful to only provide a public module for just the default > version. I'm unsure what you mean with when talking about the above mentioned > "issue"
Is it a joke? If you don’t know what this is about, why are you even talking about python packaging? Were you even reading the discussions on the Python policy when there have been some? "current" does not mean anything, semantically, especially for public modules/extensions. There is a set of supported versions, and that’s all. For extensions, it is the set of versions the extension has been built against, and for modules, it is the set of versions the module can work with. In neither of these cases does "current" mean anything. -- .''`. Debian 5.0 "Lenny" has been released! : :' : `. `' Last night, Darth Vader came down from planet Vulcan and `- told that if you don't install Lenny, he'd melt your brain.
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