On 10-02-2010 00:09, Alf P. Steinbach wrote:
* David Robinow:
On Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 5:10 PM, Simon Brunning <si...@brunningonline.net> wrote:
On 9 February 2010 16:29, Robert Kern <robert.k...@gmail.com> wrote:
On 2010-02-09 09:37 AM, Daniel Fetchinson wrote:
If the code base stabilizes in a production version after losing the
alphas and betas they would be a great addition to the stdlib, I
think.
Why?
I agree. Why wait? Put them in the stdlib now!

Can we please stop this?

I agree.

sorry I don't,
unless Python is only meant for the very well educated people in encryption.

I haven't looked at the code but the functionality that's listed is useful, e.g. in a Usenet client, and it's fun to play around with for a beginner.
I neither did look at the code,
but as a beginner with just 3 years of experience in Python,
I've tried several scrambling libs, for a quick and dirty use.
All were much too difficult, so I made my own xor-something.
Coming from Delphi, a scrambling lib is working is less than 10 minutes, without the need of any knowledge of encryption. I prefer Python over Delphi, but some things are made very complex in Python.

cheers,
Stef

Also, for example, Christian Heimes wrote else-thread: «Your work should be interesting for everybody who has read Simon Sing's "The Code Book: The Science of Secrecy from Ancient Egypt to Quantum"» (and I for one have that book).


Cheers,

- Alf

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