> Just out of curiosity, what are the chances of this happening (sort of like > what happened with sqlite)?
As a starting point, the author(s) of wxPython would need to contribute it to Python (and then also give the PSF the permission to relicense it). If no such contribution is made, chances are zero. Somebody else contributing it in place of the authors is not acceptable - that somebody likely doesn't have the right to grant the proper license to the PSF, and it would also meant that the in-core version of wxPython forked from the official version, which would be unacceptable. In addition, a group of people (not necessarily the authors) would have to offer maintaining the in-core copy of wxPython, in the sense of keeping it synchronized with the stand-alone release, resolving bug reports related to the library (in particular wrt. portability), and so on. Again, with nobody offering maintenance, chances are again zero. For sqlite, both conditions were met, so it could be integrated. HTH, Martin -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list