Python 3 is killing Python
Frank Millman
frank at chagford.com
Thu Jul 17 01:18:54 EDT 2014
"Steven D'Aprano" <steve+comp.lang.python at pearwood.info> wrote in message
news:53c66ba8$0$9505$c3e8da3$5496439d at news.astraweb.com...
>
> E.g. having b"abc"[0] return 97 instead of b"a" was probably a mistake,
> but there are four versions of Python 3.x that do it that way and it's
> too late to change until Python 5000. (Python 4 is unlikely to break
> backwards compatibility in a big way.)
>
If it was considered important enough, couldn't they just introduce a new
datatype, say B'...', with the desired behaviour. B'' would be backported to
Python 2.7 as an alternative to b'', to faciliate writing code that works on
both versions.
There would be a lot of overlap with b'...', but the differences could be
documented. Methods could be added to B'' to replicate any behaviour of b''
which has been changed. Then over time b'' could be deprecated, and in
Python 4 b'' could replace B''.
Frank Millman
More information about the Python-list
mailing list