On Mon, Jun 7, 2010 at 11:20 PM, Eric Smith
Tarek Ziadé wrote:
On Mon, Jun 7, 2010 at 10:00 PM, Ian Bicking
wrote: On Mon, Jun 7, 2010 at 2:57 PM, Tarek Ziadé
wrote: If there are important bugs we'll have to work around them. If there are added features we'll have to ignore them. Not for the bug fixes because they will likely to be backported in all versions. (3.3 and 2.7)
Now for new features, if pip uses the latest 2.x and the latest 3.x versions, you will get them. I am not sure why you would have to ignore them. You would probably want to use the new features when they are released, and still make your code work with older versions.
There's no way for the new features to show up in 3.3, is there? You can't add them to a micro release, and you can't replace a module in the standard library. I think that's Ian's point.
Yes, I understood that. My point is that you can adapt your software when the Python version you use is an old version, and you don't have the latest feature. That's how we work with all modules/packages from the stdlib, and features are added at every Python version. The stdlib is not frozen.
pip could use the new features in 3.4, and it could get the new features in 2.x if the users were willing to install the updated library, since it's not in the stdlib. But for 3.3 you'd be stuck.
Not stuck, but you will definitely need to deal with it in your project. And this is not new. That's why I have suggested earlier authorizing partial updates of the stdlib, but it seemed that the idea was disliked because of the complexity it would bring. Regards Tarek
-- Eric.
-- Tarek Ziadé | http://ziade.org