Emile van Sebille wrote:
On 5/18/2009 1:27 PM Jive Dadson said...
I love Python, but the update regimen is very frustrating. It's a
misery to me why every major release requires new versions of so much
application stuff. No other software that I use is like that. When I
upgrade Windoze, I do not have to get new matching versions of all my
editors, browsers, and whatnot. But Python makes me do that, and
that's why I am stuck on release 2.4. Even the pure Python stuff
needs to be copied from one "site-packages" to another. Then I have
to figure out why it won't work. I have fought my way through the
upgrade path twice, and I just can't face it again.
Thus endeth the rant.
Hmm.. I support python versions ranging from 1.52 though 2.6 on some
40-50 production systems and don't have an issue with upgrades. First,
once I stabilize a production system it doesn't get upgrades anymore
this is where the guy chides: cheat, cheat :) see below
unless the machine breaks or the application specs change to the point
where upgrade is better than maintaining. Second, when setting up a new
system I always start with the freshest versions of things (barring
python 3.x which I haven't yet put in a production environment).
Upgrading because newer is available has been a problem as long as
upgrades have been available. Just this month some system snuck by me
with windows update enabled only to have microsofts auto-update break
the applications.
Just say no to updates...
Welcome to the club!
Emile
You-all have a great day now! - ya here?
Steve
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list