On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 5:16 PM, Brett Cannon <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:brett@python.org">brett@python.org</a>></span> wrote:<br><div class="gmail_quote"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
<div class="gmail_quote"><div class="im">On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 13:00, Glyph Lefkowitz <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:glyph@twistedmatrix.com" target="_blank">glyph@twistedmatrix.com</a>></span> wrote:
<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;"><div class="gmail_quote"><div>The carrots I'm interested in as a user are new possibilties, like new standard library features, a better debugger/profiler, or everybody's favorate bugaboo, multicore parallelism. (Although, to be fair, the removal of old-style classes qualifies.) <br>
</div></div></blockquote></div></div></blockquote><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;"><div class="gmail_quote"><div>Sure, but if people like Mark are having to spend their time backporting every bit of behaviour like this then we won't have the time and energy to add the bigger carrots to 3.x to help entice people to switch. <br>
</div></div></blockquote><div><br>Okay, call me +0 then. Not one of the migration issues I'm really sweating about :).<br> <br></div></div>