Paul Moore wrote:
the "batteries included" argument was a huge selling points years ago (when Aaron Watters wrote "Internet Programming With Python", for instance) but I think the situation has changed quite a bit since then. For some people/situations, yes. For others, definitely not. "Batteries included" is still an extremely significant selling point for some users of Python. Anyone contributing to this discussion should be very careful not to assume that everyone using Python works in a similar environment to
On Tue, 16 Jun 2020 at 11:53, Stéfane Fermigier sf@fermigier.com wrote: them. For example, many people work in environments where Internet access is tightly controlled one way or another. Not all countries or regions have reliable or widespread internet access. And some people simply need scripts to be easy to run, so "install Python and run this script" is as complex as it can get. Paul
Modularization that I suggest is just to separate modules and clean interfaces between them in such way it would be possible to use standard provided module when you download CPython or update this module from PyPi