Is it worth calling the prototype version *before* web3py: web3000py? Or would 
that be unbearably geeky?

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On 13 Jul 2011, at 5:21 PM, Massimo Di Pierro <massimo.dipie...@gmail.com> 
wrote:

> +1
> 
> On Jul 13, 9:28 am, Caleb Hattingh <caleb.hatti...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Agreed, I think web2py on Py3 is pointless.
>> 
>> An entirely different project, called, let's say, web3py, which runs on Py3
>> is a different animal altogether...
>> 
>> On 13 July 2011 15:50, Anthony <abasta...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>>> The problem is, it would break backward compatibility.
>> 
>>> On Wednesday, July 13, 2011 12:54:57 AM UTC-4, Rahul wrote:
>> 
>>>> Its true that there are existing python versions 2.6, 2.7.x but what I
>>>> would like is Web2py support for Python 3.
>>>> Reasons:
>>>> 1. We should provide early support for Python 3 (regardless of what
>>>> wsgi standard it will provide) because it may trigger a lot of python
>>>> users to adopt Web2py as it might be the ONLY Full Stack Framework
>>>> that will be supporting Python 3
>>>> 2. Python 3.x is the future of Python (I see this to be very true)
>>>> Eventually we would all be using Python 3.x in our production
>>>> systems.
>>>> 3. Lets progress rather than remaining stagnant with existing versions
>>>> of Python only. I mean Why Not the latest Python ??
>> 
>>>> Cheers, Rahul D
>> 
>>>> On Jul 12, 5:38 pm, pbreit <pbreit...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>> I suspect 2.6 is going to be popular for some time since that's what's
>>>> in
>>>>> the current Ubuntu LTS (10.04).

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