Announcing wxPython 4.0.0a1 --------------------------- https://pypi.python.org/pypi/wxPython/4.0.0a1
I'm pleased to announce that wxPython's Project Phoenix has made it's public debut as wxPython 4.0.0a1, available from PyPI. Don't let the fact that it is marked as an "alpha" release scare you away. It is an alpha simply because this is the **first** in several ways: * It's the first real release of Phoenix, which is built on a different foundation than Classic wxPython was. * It's the first wxPython release intended to be fully available from PyPI and buildable/installable by pip on all of the supported platforms. * It's the first release for Python3 (binaries for 3.5 and 3.6 are provided, and building for 3.4 is still possible as well). In addition, Python 2.7 is also supported from the same codebase, with binaries available. * The wheel files are fully self-contained and relocatable on the supported platforms, so they are installable in virtual environments without needing to be able to find specific versions of the wxWidgets shared libraries (or others) at fixed locations elsewhere in the file-system. * And as with most alphas, there are still a few things that are not finished or polished yet. But even with all that, many people have been using the pre-release snapshots of Phoenix for quite a while now, and it has been relatively stable and solid for them. What is wxPython? ----------------- wxPython is a cross-platform GUI toolkit for the Python programming language. It allows Python programmers to create programs with a robust, highly functional graphical user interface, simply and easily. It is implemented as a set of Python extension modules that wrap the GUI components of the popular wxWidgets cross platform library, which is written in C++. Supported platforms are Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X and macOS, and Linux or other unix-like systems with GTK2 or GTK3 libraries. In most cases the native widgets are used on each platform to provide a 100% native look and feel for the application. What is wxPython Phoenix? ------------------------- wxPython's Project Phoenix is a new from-the-ground-up implementation of wxPython, created with the intent of making wxPython “better, stronger, faster than he was before.” In other words, this new implementation is focused on improving speed, maintainability and extensibility of wxPython, as well as removing most of the cruft that had accumulated over the long life of Classic wxPython. The project has been in development off and on, mostly behind the scenes, for many years. For the past few years automated snapshot builds have been available for those adventurous enough to try it, and many people eventually started using the snapshots in their projects, even for production releases. While there are still some things on the periphery that need to be completed, the core of the new wxPython extension modules which wrap the wxWidgets code has been stable for a long time now. Due to some things being cleaned up, reorganized, simplified and dehackified wxPython Phoenix is not completely backwards compatible with wxPython Classic. This is intended. In general, however, the API differences tend to be minor and some applications can use Phoenix with slight, or even no modifications. In some other cases the correct way to do things was also available in Classic and it's only the wrong way that has been removed from Phoenix. For more information there is a Migration Guide document available at: https://wxpython.org/Phoenix/docs/html/MigrationGuide.html The new wxPython API reference documentation, including all Python-specific additions and customizations, and docs for the wx.lib package, is located at: https://wxpython.org/Phoenix/docs/html/main.html -- Robin Dunn Software Craftsman http://wxPython.org -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-announce-list Support the Python Software Foundation: http://www.python.org/psf/donations/