On 5/31/2014 2:05 PM, "Martin v. Löwis" wrote:
Am 31.05.14 05:32, schrieb Terry Reedy:
I have two areas of questions about updating turtle.py. First the module
itself, then a turtle tracker issue versus code cleanup policies.
A. Unlike most stdlib modules, turtle is copyrighted and licensed by
Am 31.05.14 10:09, schrieb Stephen J. Turnbull:
> AFAICT Python policy is that someone should ask Gregor (a precedent is
> the Fredrik Lundh/ElementTree case). AIUI, there's been a five-year
> span since Gregor's been active, so I would think it's basically a
> matter of courtesy. Most likely he'
Am 31.05.14 05:32, schrieb Terry Reedy:
> I have two areas of questions about updating turtle.py. First the module
> itself, then a turtle tracker issue versus code cleanup policies.
>
> A. Unlike most stdlib modules, turtle is copyrighted and licensed by an
> individual.
> '''
> # turtle.py: a Tk
Chris Barker writes:
> that way. Saying that their very first easy program is:
>
> print("hello world")
>
> is fine
I have had similar experience on a small scale.
Also I've been teaching R recently. The students who know Python
(Python 3, we don't have backward compatibility issues in o
Terry Reedy writes:
> As to point 2, the source has been altered a bit (by others) but it is
> not marked as such. How should it be?
I would suggest adding
"""
Based on turtle 1.1b for Python 3.1 (4.5.2009) by Gregor Lingl.
This is a revised version including changes from the Python community