Laszlo (Laca) Peter writes:
> On Tue, 2009-01-27 at 08:09 -0500, James Carlson wrote:
> > I'm a little puzzled by that.  Why would /usr/bin/python give me the
> > latest version of Python 2.x in particular, rather than just the
> > latest version of Python in general?
> 
> Python 3.0 is very new and not widely adopted yet.

OK.  I'll assume that /usr/bin/python though *will* (in the indefinite
future) become 3.0, and that it's not actually defined for users in
terms of 2.x.

Making it the "newest commonly usable version" or some such should
resolve the issue.

With that, +1.

> > Why does history end at the end of 2.x?
> > 
> > Why would I want the latest of a slowly dying major release?
> 
> Many of the modules that you may be looking for are not yet available
> for 3.0.  I expect that most people looking for "any version of python" 
> are really looking for a 2.x release.

Understood; it was the _definition_ of the link in specific terms of
2.x that seemed puzzling, as I don't think that history ends there.

-- 
James Carlson, Solaris Networking              <james.d.carlson at sun.com>
Sun Microsystems / 35 Network Drive        71.232W   Vox +1 781 442 2084
MS UBUR02-212 / Burlington MA 01803-2757   42.496N   Fax +1 781 442 1677

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