> The standard library is not about easeness of installation. It is about > having > a consistent fixed codebase to work with. I don't want to go Perl/CPAN, > where you have 3-4 alternatives to do thing A which will never > interoperate > with whatever you chose among the 3-4 alternatives to do thing B.
Currently in Python: http://docs.python.org/lib/module-xml.dom.html http://docs.python.org/lib/module-xml.dom.minidom.html http://docs.python.org/lib/module-xml.sax.html http://docs.python.org/lib/module-xml.parsers.expat.html http://docs.python.org/lib/module-xml.etree.ElementTree.html The problem of "consistent fixed codebase" is that standards get higher, so eventually those old stable modules lose popularity in favor of newer, better modules. Therefore, you have to obsolete old stuff if you want there to be only One Obvious Way To Do It. _______________________________________________ Python-3000 mailing list [email protected] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-3000 Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-3000/archive%40mail-archive.com
