I came from the PHP world myself and am even doing some of it still
but I don't think what you're saying is of particular concern.

Even in PHP you have to worry about differences in PHP 4 and 5 and so
on so the concern itself isn't just a Python one.  I can say that
support for Python 2.6 will be around for a long time and transitions
in Python for me have always been much easier than in PHP.   If you're
fairly new to Python I doubt you're really venturing into the areas
that will be of major concern in a transition as well.

Good luck with it and Welcome to the Python end of the pool.

On Aug 5, 4:47 pm, snfctech <tschm...@sacfoodcoop.com> wrote:
> Hello.
>
> We are researching technologies to begin what may become a pretty
> large intranet Dashboard project.
>
> I'm a PHP developer, so the fact that Django uses Python doesn't give
> me a head-start - but I've been wanting to consider it, because I am
> interested in learning Python.
>
> However, I'm nervous about the Python 3 situation.  What if I start
> building a large project based on Django/Python 2.6, and then a year
> or two down the road the project starts limping because of all of the
> cool new Python 3 modules coming out?  And I've got a bunch of Django/
> Python 2.6 code that needs to be ported?
>
> Any tips would be greatly appreciated.  Thanks.
>
> Tony
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