pip 18.0 has been released!
On behalf of the PyPA, I am pleased to announce that pip 18.0 has just been released. To install pip 18.0, you can run python -m pip install --upgrade pip or use get-pip as described in https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/installing. Note that if you are using a version of pip supplied by your distribution vendor, vendor-supplied upgrades will be available in due course (or you can use pip 18 in a virtual environment). This is the first pip release since adopting 3 month release cadence and a Calendar based versioning scheme (also known as CalVer). In simpler words, there will be a new pip release every 3 months unless there are no changes since the previous release. More details such as release months can be found in pip's development documentation. The highlights of this release are: - Python 3.3 is no longer supported - if you need pip on Python 3.3, you should stay on pip 10, which is the last version to support Python 3.3. - Complete PEP 518 support - includes support for installation of build dependencies from source and Unicode support on Python 2 and Windows - New --prefer-binary flag, to prefer older wheels over newer sdists - Many bug fixes and minor improvements Thanks to everyone who put so much effort into the new release. Many of the contributions came from community members, whether in the form of code, participation in design discussions and/or bug reports. The pip development team is extremely grateful to everyone in the community for their contributions. Thanks, Pradyun
Yay! Congratulations on the release, and thanks for all the work you put into it. Paul On 22 July 2018 at 11:51, Pradyun Gedam <pradyunsg@gmail.com> wrote:
On behalf of the PyPA, I am pleased to announce that pip 18.0 has just been released.
To install pip 18.0, you can run
python -m pip install --upgrade pip
or use get-pip as described in https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/installing. Note that if you are using a version of pip supplied by your distribution vendor, vendor-supplied upgrades will be available in due course (or you can use pip 18 in a virtual environment).
This is the first pip release since adopting 3 month release cadence and a Calendar based versioning scheme (also known as CalVer). In simpler words, there will be a new pip release every 3 months unless there are no changes since the previous release. More details such as release months can be found in pip's development documentation.
The highlights of this release are:
- Python 3.3 is no longer supported - if you need pip on Python 3.3, you should stay on pip 10, which is the last version to support Python 3.3. - Complete PEP 518 support - includes support for installation of build dependencies from source and Unicode support on Python 2 and Windows - New --prefer-binary flag, to prefer older wheels over newer sdists - Many bug fixes and minor improvements
Thanks to everyone who put so much effort into the new release. Many of the contributions came from community members, whether in the form of code, participation in design discussions and/or bug reports. The pip development team is extremely grateful to everyone in the community for their contributions.
Thanks, Pradyun
I noticed the version number jumped from 10.0.1 -> 18.0 Is there a reason for such? Change in version numbering policy which I missed reading? On Sun, Jul 22, 2018 at 4:07 AM, Paul Moore <p.f.moore@gmail.com> wrote:
Yay! Congratulations on the release, and thanks for all the work you put into it.
Paul
On 22 July 2018 at 11:51, Pradyun Gedam <pradyunsg@gmail.com> wrote:
On behalf of the PyPA, I am pleased to announce that pip 18.0 has just been released.
To install pip 18.0, you can run
python -m pip install --upgrade pip
or use get-pip as described in https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/installing. Note that if you are using a version of pip supplied by your distribution vendor, vendor-supplied upgrades will be available in due course (or you can use pip 18 in a virtual environment).
This is the first pip release since adopting 3 month release cadence and a Calendar based versioning scheme (also known as CalVer). In simpler words, there will be a new pip release every 3 months unless there are no changes since the previous release. More details such as release months can be found in pip's development documentation.
The highlights of this release are:
- Python 3.3 is no longer supported - if you need pip on Python 3.3, you should stay on pip 10, which is the last version to support Python 3.3. - Complete PEP 518 support - includes support for installation of build dependencies from source and Unicode support on Python 2 and Windows - New --prefer-binary flag, to prefer older wheels over newer sdists - Many bug fixes and minor improvements
Thanks to everyone who put so much effort into the new release. Many of the contributions came from community members, whether in the form of code, participation in design discussions and/or bug reports. The pip development team is extremely grateful to everyone in the community for their contributions.
Thanks, Pradyun -- Distutils-SIG mailing list -- distutils-sig@python.org To unsubscribe send an email to distutils-sig-leave@python.org https://mail.python.org/mm3/mailman3/lists/distutils-sig.python.org/ Message archived at https://mail.python.org/mm3/ archives/list/distutils-sig@python.org/message/ 5F2LHKKTCSODTXYBDYKIX2OTMYRFSKCE/
That's what "calendar based versioning" means. It refers to the year of release. See https://calver.org On July 22, 2018 11:07:58 PM UTC, Bill Deegan <bill@baddogconsulting.com> wrote:
I noticed the version number jumped from 10.0.1 -> 18.0 Is there a reason for such? Change in version numbering policy which I missed reading?
On Sun, Jul 22, 2018 at 4:07 AM, Paul Moore <p.f.moore@gmail.com> wrote:
Yay! Congratulations on the release, and thanks for all the work you put into it.
Paul
On behalf of the PyPA, I am pleased to announce that pip 18.0 has just been released.
To install pip 18.0, you can run
python -m pip install --upgrade pip
or use get-pip as described in https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/installing. Note that if you are using a version of pip supplied by your distribution vendor, vendor-supplied upgrades will be available in due course (or you can use pip 18 in a virtual environment).
This is the first pip release since adopting 3 month release cadence and a Calendar based versioning scheme (also known as CalVer). In simpler words, there will be a new pip release every 3 months unless there are no changes since the previous release. More details such as release months can be found in pip's development documentation.
The highlights of this release are:
- Python 3.3 is no longer supported - if you need pip on Python 3.3, you should stay on pip 10, which is the last version to support Python 3.3. - Complete PEP 518 support - includes support for installation of build dependencies from source and Unicode support on Python 2 and Windows - New --prefer-binary flag, to prefer older wheels over newer sdists - Many bug fixes and minor improvements
Thanks to everyone who put so much effort into the new release. Many of the contributions came from community members, whether in the form of code, participation in design discussions and/or bug reports. The
On 22 July 2018 at 11:51, Pradyun Gedam <pradyunsg@gmail.com> wrote: pip
development team is extremely grateful to everyone in the community for their contributions.
Thanks, Pradyun -- Distutils-SIG mailing list -- distutils-sig@python.org To unsubscribe send an email to distutils-sig-leave@python.org https://mail.python.org/mm3/mailman3/lists/distutils-sig.python.org/ Message archived at https://mail.python.org/mm3/ archives/list/distutils-sig@python.org/message/ 5F2LHKKTCSODTXYBDYKIX2OTMYRFSKCE/
Gotcha! On Sun, Jul 22, 2018 at 4:12 PM, Paul G <paul@ganssle.io> wrote:
That's what "calendar based versioning" means. It refers to the year of release. See https://calver.org
On July 22, 2018 11:07:58 PM UTC, Bill Deegan <bill@baddogconsulting.com> wrote:
I noticed the version number jumped from 10.0.1 -> 18.0 Is there a reason for such? Change in version numbering policy which I missed reading?
On Sun, Jul 22, 2018 at 4:07 AM, Paul Moore <p.f.moore@gmail.com> wrote:
Yay! Congratulations on the release, and thanks for all the work you put into it.
Paul
On 22 July 2018 at 11:51, Pradyun Gedam <pradyunsg@gmail.com> wrote:
On behalf of the PyPA, I am pleased to announce that pip 18.0 has just been released.
To install pip 18.0, you can run
python -m pip install --upgrade pip
or use get-pip as described in https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/ installing. Note that if you are using a version of pip supplied by your distribution vendor, vendor-supplied upgrades will be available in due course (or you can use pip 18 in a virtual environment).
This is the first pip release since adopting 3 month release cadence and a Calendar based versioning scheme (also known as CalVer). In simpler words, there will be a new pip release every 3 months unless there are no changes since the previous release. More details such as release months can be found in pip's development documentation.
The highlights of this release are:
- Python 3.3 is no longer supported - if you need pip on Python 3.3, you should stay on pip 10, which is the last version to support Python 3.3. - Complete PEP 518 support - includes support for installation of build dependencies from source and Unicode support on Python 2 and Windows - New --prefer-binary flag, to prefer older wheels over newer sdists - Many bug fixes and minor improvements
Thanks to everyone who put so much effort into the new release. Many of the contributions came from community members, whether in the form of code, participation in design discussions and/or bug reports. The pip development team is extremely grateful to everyone in the community for their contributions.
Thanks, Pradyun -- Distutils-SIG mailing list -- distutils-sig@python.org To unsubscribe send an email to distutils-sig-leave@python.org https://mail.python.org/mm3/mailman3/lists/distutils-sig.python.org/ Message archived at https://mail.python.org/mm3/ar chives/list/distutils-sig@python.org/message/5F2LHKKTCSODTXY BDYKIX2OTMYRFSKCE/
participants (4)
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Bill Deegan
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Paul G
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Paul Moore
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Pradyun Gedam