Hello,
There is a need for the default Python2 install to place a
symlink at /usr/bin/python2 that points to /usr/bin/python, or
for the documentation to recommend that packagers ensure that
python2 is defined. Also, all documentation should be changed to
recommend that "#!/usr/bin/env python2" be used as the shebang
for Python 2 scripts.
This is needed because some distributions (Arch Linux, in
particular), point /usr/bin/python to /usr/bin/python3, while
others (including Slackware, Debian, and the BSDs, probably
more) do not even define the python2 command. This means that a
script has no way of achieving cross-platform compatibility. The
point at which many distributions begin to alias /usr/bin/python
to /usr/bin/python3 is due soon, and for the next couple of
years, it would be best to use a python2 or python3 shebang in
all scripts, making no assumptions about plain python, which
should only be invoked interactively. This email from about 3
years ago seems relevant: :
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-3000/2008-March/012421.html
Again, this issue needs to be addressed by the Python
developers themselves so that different *nix distributions will
handle it consistently, allowing Python scripts to continue to
be cross-platform.