Re: Python 3000 vs. Python 2.x

2008-06-13 Thread Christian Heimes
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > As a new comer to Python I was wondering which is the best to start > learning. I've read that a number of significant features have > changed between the two versions. Yet, the majority of Python > programs out in the world are 2.x and it would be nice to understand >

Re: Python 3000 vs. Python 2.x

2008-06-13 Thread George Sakkis
On Jun 13, 5:04 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > As a new comer to Python I was wondering which is the best to start > learning. I've read that a number of significant features have > changed between the two versions. Yet, the majority of Python > programs out in the world are 2.x and it would be

Re: Python 3000 vs. Python 2.x

2008-06-13 Thread Matt Nordhoff
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > As a new comer to Python I was wondering which is the best to start > learning. I've read that a number of significant features have > changed between the two versions. Yet, the majority of Python > programs out in the world are 2.x and it would be nice to understand >

Re: Python 3000 vs. Python 2.x

2008-06-13 Thread Terry Reedy
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] | As a new comer to Python I was wondering which is the best to start | learning. I've read that a number of significant features have | changed between the two versions. Yet, the majority of Python | programs out in the world are 2.x

Re: Python 3000 vs. Python 2.x

2008-06-13 Thread mr . opus . penguin
On Jun 13, 4:13 pm, Mensanator <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Jun 13, 4:04 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > As a new comer to Python I was wondering which is the best to start > > learning. I've read that a number of significant features have > > changed between the two versions. Yet, the majo

Re: Python 3000 vs. Python 2.x

2008-06-13 Thread Mensanator
On Jun 13, 4:04 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > As a new comer to Python I was wondering which is the best to start > learning.  I've read that a number of significant features have > changed between the two versions.  Yet, the majority of Python > programs out in the world are 2.x and it would be n