I am starting to have doubts as to whether Python 3.x will ever be actually adopted by the Python community at large as their standard. Years have passed, and a LARGE number of Python programmers has not even bothered learning version 3.x. Why am I bothered by this? Because of lot of good libraries are still only for version 2.x, and there is no sign of their being updated for v3.x. I get the impression as if 3.x, despite being better and more advanced than 2.x from the technical point of view, is a bit of a letdown in terms of adoption. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
- Will Python 3.x ever become the actual standard? dufriz
- Re: Will Python 3.x ever become the actual standard... David
- Re: Will Python 3.x ever become the actual stan... Chris Angelico
- Re: Will Python 3.x ever become the actual stan... Mark Lawrence
- Re: Will Python 3.x ever become the actual standard... Mark Lawrence
- Re: Will Python 3.x ever become the actual standard... Neil Cerutti
- Re: Will Python 3.x ever become the actual stan... Gene Heskett
- Re: Will Python 3.x ever become the actual standard... Roy Smith
- Re: Will Python 3.x ever become the actual standard... Colin J. Williams
- Re: Will Python 3.x ever become the actual stan... Tim Golden
- Re: Will Python 3.x ever become the actual ... Mark Lawrence