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> It's probably fair to suggest PSF has stumbled in executing some of their goals, most notably and publicly the transition to v3

In a recent post linked on HN, Steve Yegge basically nailed it:

> How much new software was written in something other than Python, which might have been written in Python if Guido hadn’t burned everyone’s house down? It’s hard to say, but I can tell you, it hasn’t been good for Python. It’s a huge mess and everyone is miserable.

Note to future language maintainers: don't burn everyone's house down.




I did RTFA, but I haven't been on the Python scene long enough to have a truly educated opinion about the transition to v3. It's not unusual for a language to make breaking changes in early versions. What happens when you realize you need to do it late in the game? Tough call. I think it's probably impossible to know whether cost of breaking changes in the short term (people leaving Python for Go, etc.) was justified relative to the cost of a crufty and inadequate Python in the future (people leaving Python for Go, etc.). I'm generally sympathetic, but I'm glad I didn't get into Python until the transition was well underway.


Link?





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