On 29. 04. 20 21:42, Lloyd Kvam wrote:
What you say is true. I still don't agree that "python3.9" as a package name
annoys humans.
I am not a package pro, but simply reading along as an interested human user. 
To me, adding
periods in package names can be confusing.

My sentence was about "python3.9" not being more annoying than "python-3.9".

I wonder, why do you consider periods in names confusing?

We have around ~100 source package names with dot. Most of them have versions, 
e.g.:

clang9.0
dotnet3.1
freerdp1.2
llvm5.0
llvm6.0
llvm9.0
jboss-jsf-2.1-api
jboss-jsf-2.2-api
jboss-jsp-2.2-api
jboss-jsp-2.3-api

Some use dot as a separator, e.g.:

R-R.utils
R-data.table
R-futile.logger
R-futile.options
R-gamlss.dist
R-lambda.r
R-statnet.common
openoffice.org-diafilter
python-boolean.py


I will adjust to whatever you decide to do, and I am not informed enough to 
want a vote in how
this decision comes down, but I do not see an advantage to this sort of change.

The biggest advantage I see is getting closer to upstream.

The command that the user executes is "python3.9", not "python39".

I know no other place in the Python ecosystem where Python 3.9 is called "python39" than the names of RPM packages (or other Linux distro packages).

I've googled "python36", "python37" etc. and all I could find was Fedora/RHEL/CentOS related (or AUR). We have invented that naming ourselves and we don't like being different :)

(There is the "py39" short identifier used e.g. in tox, but not "python39".)

--
Miro Hrončok
--
Phone: +420777974800
IRC: mhroncok
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