Re: [python-tulip] New asyncio release on PyPI?

2016-05-13 Thread pjenvey
There will definitely be new 3.3 releases (not CPython). As for CPython, according to Georg only 3.2 is discontinued: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2016-February/143400.html On Friday, March 25, 2016 at 4:41:28 PM UTC-7, Guido van Rossum wrote: > > Maybe because Python 3.3 is no l

Re: [python-tulip] New asyncio release on PyPI?

2016-03-25 Thread Gustavo Carneiro
On 25 March 2016 at 23:49, Victor Stinner wrote: > Does someone need an asyncio version more recent than the version in > your Python 3.4 or 3.5 standard library? > > I recall a discussion about installing the PyPI version because it is > more recent, and sys.path tricks to use it instead of the

Re: [python-tulip] New asyncio release on PyPI?

2016-03-25 Thread Victor Stinner
Does someone need an asyncio version more recent than the version in your Python 3.4 or 3.5 standard library? I recall a discussion about installing the PyPI version because it is more recent, and sys.path tricks to use it instead of the stdlib flavor. Victor 2016-03-26 0:41 GMT+01:00 Guido van

Re: [python-tulip] New asyncio release on PyPI?

2016-03-25 Thread Guido van Rossum
Maybe because Python 3.3 is no longer getting new releases either? Probably most people just use the asyncio from the stdlib and are happy with it. On Fri, Mar 25, 2016 at 5:37 AM, Victor Stinner wrote: > Hi, > > * The latest asyncio release is now one year old: asyncio 3.4.3 was > released at 20

[python-tulip] New asyncio release on PyPI?

2016-03-25 Thread Victor Stinner
Hi, * The latest asyncio release is now one year old: asyncio 3.4.3 was released at 2015-03-10. * Python 3.5.1 was released at 2015-12-07. * Python 3.5.0 was released at 2015-09-13. Is there a reason why no new asyncio version was released on the cheese shop? I guess that we have to find the Git