
Am 05.02.2010 23:06, schrieb Brett Cannon:
On Fri, Feb 5, 2010 at 13:59, Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org <mailto:guido@python.org>> wrote:
On Fri, Feb 5, 2010 at 1:55 PM, Brett Cannon <brett@python.org <mailto:brett@python.org>> wrote: > Which reminds me, how do we want to handle ideas that come up during hte > moratorium? Do we simply want to force them to be brought up again when 3.3 > development opens up, or should we settle them now and require they have a > PEP or bug marked for 3.3? The former risks a thundering herd of idea but it > does make sure only serious ideas get brought up as someone has to remember > to mention it again in at least a year.
I don't think we need to settle on a single process for this. If someone cares enough to write a PEP or file a bug let them do it. If they don't but remember when the moratorium ends, we can't stop them.
I suppose a new tracker category for this would be fine to add. If someone actually goes through the efforts of writing a PEP falling in this category we can add a new PEP status too.
For issues it's probably enough to either mark them against Python 3.3 or add a Moratorium keyword and simply not set their version in case the moratorium goes past 3.3. As for PEPs, we can mark their targeted version as 'Moratorium' or something.
+1 -- I've created http://bugs.python.org/keyword10 for the eventuality. Georg -- Thus spake the Lord: Thou shalt indent with four spaces. No more, no less. Four shall be the number of spaces thou shalt indent, and the number of thy indenting shall be four. Eight shalt thou not indent, nor either indent thou two, excepting that thou then proceed to four. Tabs are right out.