Tony R. added the comment:
On Oct 26, 2015, at 4:28 PM, Ezio Melotti <report@bugs.python.org> wrote:
This is true, but on the other hand you might want to see the [new in 3.4] while looking at 3.6 docs and working on a program that must support Python 3.3+. Anyway we can discuss this again once we have a patch -- depending on how it is implemented, it might be easy enough to include the tag only for functions added in the last 2 releases, or perhaps the tag won't be particularly distracting and can be used for all versions.
Smart use of CSS and a sprinkle of JavaScript could solve this. - Add all versions in the markup - By default, use CSS to hide all except latest version - Using JavaScript and a simple `localStorage` variable, save a preference to “lower the version threshold” if desired I tend to prefer non-JS solutions when possible, but this would only take a few lines of code. (And of course, one `localStorage` variable along the lines of `minimumAddedInPythonVersion = ‘3.2’`, or whatever.) —Tony ---------- _______________________________________ Python tracker <report@bugs.python.org> <http://bugs.python.org/issue25467> _______________________________________