Using two pythons in an application
Rhamphoryncus
rhamph at gmail.com
Mon Aug 4 17:04:52 EDT 2008
On Aug 3, 5:43 pm, Allen <brian_vanderbu... at yahoo.com> wrote:
> Larry Bates wrote:
> > Allen wrote:
> >> I'm in the process of developing an application that will use Python
> >> for a scripting support. In light of the upcoming changes to Python,
> >> I was wondering if it is possible to link to and use two different
> >> versions of Python so that in the future, scripts could be migrated
> >> to the new version, and older scripts would still work as well. If so
> >> are there any code examples of this.
>
> >> Brian Vanderburg II
>
> > Unlike languages you pay for, Python has on real motivation to
> > "obsolete" old versions of Python (e.g. to force you to pay of an
> > upgrade). You can still get version 1.5.2 of Python and it is MANY
> > years old and most could consider quite obsolete. I just would not
> > worry about it and stick with 2.5/2.6 for development and begin looking
> > at Python 3.0 so I can learn what's new and exciting.
>
> > -Larry
>
> I agree. I had wanted for scripts of the program to be able to use the
> new string format method that is only in py3k, but I'm currently looking
> into other template solutions.
That should work in 2.6 (sans bugs).
To answer your original question, no, you can't load more than one
version of python within a single process. The best you can do is
running in a child process.
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