On 3/26/2019 5:11 AM, Łukasz Langa wrote:
It's time for the third alpha of Python 3.8.0. Go get it here:
https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-380a3/
This page
https://www.python.org/download/pre-releases/
still lists and links to .0a2
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Le 26/03/2019 à 09:58, M.-A. Lemburg a écrit :
>
>>> Asking people who have voted -1 or +1 to publicly tell the world why
>>> they did so is not helpful in this respect, since it just creates bias.
>>> What people, who are unsure how to vote, really need, is more
>>> information, not bias.
>>
>>
https://blog.python.org/2019/03/python-373-is-now-available.html
Python 3.7.3 is now available. Python 3.7.3 is the next
maintenance release of Python 3.7, the latest feature release of Python.
You can find Python 3.7.3 here:
https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-373/
See the What’s
On 26.03.2019 05:20, Raymond Hettinger wrote:
>
>> On Mar 22, 2019, at 8:34 AM, Victor Stinner wrote:
>>
>> Julien Palard and me (Victor) propose to promote Stéphane Wirtel as
>> core developer. We open a vote until March 31 (~one week). "[A
>> promotion] is granted by receiving at least
It's time for the third alpha of Python 3.8.0. Go get it here:
https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-380a3/
Python 3.8.0a3 is the third of four planned alpha releases of Python 3.8,
the next feature release of Python. During the alpha phase, Python 3.8
remains under heavy development:
On 25.03.2019 23:58, Steve Dower wrote:
> On 25Mar2019 1503, M.-A. Lemburg wrote:
>> On 25.03.2019 16:20, Steve Dower wrote:
>>> To be clear, my pushback (on Discourse, since I can only send email from
>>> an actual laptop these days but can participate over there from my
>>> phone) has been