On 10/3/07, Florian Lindner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Oh sorry, I didn't really consider this a discussion.
There's nothing to discuss, really. Porting Django to Python 3 isn't
even a theoretical possibility until Python 3 is released in a
finalized form and all of the libraries we depend on (
Which means there is a tool for converting the versions otherwise you
are going to have to maintain 2 code bases.
On Oct 3, 1:51 pm, Florian Lindner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
> I'm just curious:
>
> What is your (the developers of Django) attitude towards Py
andbox/trunk/2to3/
On Oct 3, 1:51 pm, Florian Lindner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
> I'm just curious:
>
> What is your (the developers of Django) attitude towards Python 3000? Since
> this release will introduce backwards incompatible steps it will be a larger
Am Mittwoch, 3. Oktober 2007 schrieb Jacob Kaplan-Moss:
> On 10/3/07, Florian Lindner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Am Mittwoch, 3. Oktober 2007 schrieb Jacob Kaplan-Moss:
> > Sorry I've searched for "python 3k" and "python 3000" both which do not
Am Mittwoch, 3. Oktober 2007 schrieb Jacob Kaplan-Moss:
> On 10/3/07, Florian Lindner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > What is your (the developers of Django) attitude towards Python 3000?
>
> Please search the archives; this has been discussed before.
Sorry I've se
On 10/3/07, Florian Lindner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What is your (the developers of Django) attitude towards Python 3000?
Please search the archives; this has been discussed before.
Jacob
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You received this message becaus
Hello,
I'm just curious:
What is your (the developers of Django) attitude towards Python 3000? Since
this release will introduce backwards incompatible steps it will be a larger
step to handle for the Python community.
Will Django be migrated to Python 3000 soon after it is relased or