Groups | Search | Server Info | Keyboard shortcuts | Login | Register [http] [https] [nntp] [nntps]
Groups > comp.lang.python > #94166
| Path | csiph.com!usenet.pasdenom.info!news.redatomik.org!newsfeed.xs4all.nl!newsfeed8.news.xs4all.nl!newsgate.cistron.nl!newsgate.news.xs4all.nl!post.news.xs4all.nl!not-for-mail |
|---|---|
| Return-Path | <python-python-list@m.gmane.org> |
| X-Original-To | python-list@python.org |
| Delivered-To | python-list@mail.python.org |
| X-Spam-Status | OK 0.000 |
| X-Spam-Evidence | '*H*': 1.00; '*S*': 0.00; 'python,': 0.02; 'static': 0.03; 'fixes': 0.05; 'think,': 0.05; '3.0.': 0.09; 'ambiguity': 0.09; 'creighton': 0.09; 'part,': 0.09; 'patches': 0.09; 'received:80.91': 0.09; 'received:80.91.229': 0.09; 'received:gmane.org': 0.09; 'received:list': 0.09; 'subject:2.7': 0.09; 'substantiate': 0.09; 'vast': 0.09; 'bug': 0.10; 'python': 0.10; 'jan': 0.11; '2.7': 0.13; 'do,': 0.15; "'this": 0.16; 'bugs,': 0.16; 'cares': 0.16; "developers'": 0.16; 'fixes.': 0.16; 'fuzzy': 0.16; 'received:80.91.229.3': 0.16; 'received:plane.gmane.org': 0.16; 'reedy': 0.16; 'stuff.': 0.16; 'subject:non': 0.16; 'wrote:': 0.16; 'laura': 0.18; 'language': 0.19; 'library': 0.20; 'changes': 0.20; '2015': 0.20; 'fix': 0.21; 'work,': 0.21; '2.x': 0.22; "aren't": 0.22; 'basis,': 0.22; 'developers.': 0.22; 'environments': 0.22; 'fixing': 0.22; 'am,': 0.23; 'leave': 0.23; 'bit': 0.23; '(or': 0.23; 'sat,': 0.23; 'thus': 0.24; 'header:In-Reply-To:1': 0.24; 'sort': 0.25; 'header :User-Agent:1': 0.26; 'developers': 0.26; 'header:X-Complaints- To:1': 0.26; 'bugs': 0.27; 'developing': 0.28; 'extending': 0.29; 'volunteers': 0.29; 'that.': 0.30; 'code': 0.30; 'programmers': 0.30; 'supposed': 0.31; 'fixed': 0.31; 'core': 0.32; 'good.': 0.32; 'run': 0.33; 'driven': 0.33; 'environment,': 0.33; 'is?': 0.33; 'changing': 0.34; 'world,': 0.35; 'clear': 0.35; 'primarily': 0.35; 'something': 0.35; "isn't": 0.35; 'but': 0.36; 'too': 0.36; 'should': 0.36; 'there': 0.36; 'beginning': 0.36; 'to:addr:python-list': 0.36; 'subject:?': 0.36; 'subject:: ': 0.37; 'really': 0.37; 'received:org': 0.37; 'one,': 0.37; 'things': 0.38; 'version': 0.38; 'drop': 0.38; 'mean': 0.38; 'why': 0.39; 'does': 0.39; 'along': 0.39; 'subject:-': 0.39; 'build': 0.40; 'to:addr:python.org': 0.40; 'where': 0.40; 'some': 0.40; 'ever': 0.60; 'close': 0.61; 'hope': 0.61; 'personally': 0.61; 'back': 0.62; 'more': 0.63; 'great': 0.63; 'our': 0.64; 'you.': 0.64; 'due': 0.65; 'benefit': 0.66; 'news': 0.68; 'risk': 0.68; 'internet': 0.70; 'jul': 0.72; 'prime': 0.72; "'if": 0.84; 'lost,': 0.84; 'belief': 0.91; 'euros': 0.91; 'received:fios.verizon.net': 0.91; 'lot,': 0.95 |
| X-Injected-Via-Gmane | http://gmane.org/ |
| To | python-list@python.org |
| From | Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> |
| Subject | Re: Should non-security 2.7 bugs be fixed? |
| Date | Sun, 19 Jul 2015 17:27:59 -0400 |
| References | <moenuj$f11$1@ger.gmane.org> <201507190927.t6J9RVqM017606@fido.openend.se> |
| Mime-Version | 1.0 |
| Content-Type | text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed |
| Content-Transfer-Encoding | 7bit |
| X-Gmane-NNTP-Posting-Host | pool-98-114-97-173.phlapa.fios.verizon.net |
| User-Agent | Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.1.0 |
| In-Reply-To | <201507190927.t6J9RVqM017606@fido.openend.se> |
| X-BeenThere | python-list@python.org |
| X-Mailman-Version | 2.1.20+ |
| Precedence | list |
| List-Id | General discussion list for the Python programming language <python-list.python.org> |
| List-Unsubscribe | <https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-list>, <mailto:python-list-request@python.org?subject=unsubscribe> |
| List-Archive | <http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/> |
| List-Post | <mailto:python-list@python.org> |
| List-Help | <mailto:python-list-request@python.org?subject=help> |
| List-Subscribe | <https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list>, <mailto:python-list-request@python.org?subject=subscribe> |
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.python |
| Message-ID | <mailman.745.1437341307.3674.python-list@python.org> (permalink) |
| Lines | 63 |
| NNTP-Posting-Host | 2001:888:2000:d::a6 |
| X-Trace | 1437341307 news.xs4all.nl 2943 [2001:888:2000:d::a6]:43464 |
| X-Complaints-To | abuse@xs4all.nl |
| Xref | csiph.com comp.lang.python:94166 |
Show key headers only | View raw
On 7/19/2015 5:27 AM, Laura Creighton wrote: > In a message of Sat, 18 Jul 2015 19:36:33 -0400, Terry Reedy writes: >> If the vast majority of Python programmers are focused on 2.7, why are >> volunteers to help fix 2.7 bugs so scarce? > > Because volunteers to fix any bugs are scarce? Because most people really > only think of bug fixing when they have one, and when they get that > one fixed they drop back into thinking that everything is perfect? > >> Does they all consider it perfect (or sufficient) as is? >> >> Should the core developers who do not personally use 2.7 stop >> backporting, because no one cares if they do? >> >> -- >> Terry Jan Reedy > > In the tiny corner of industrial automation where I do a lot of work, > nobody is using 3.0. It is not clear that this is ever going to change. > It would have to be driven by 'lack of people who know 2.x syntax' > or something like that. Not 'third party library compatibility' because > we really don't use them all that much. > > In this corner of the world, the favourite language for developing in > is C (because we work close to hardware) and one of the things we like > about it, a whole lot, is that the language never changes out from > under you. So there is great hope among industrial users of Python > that we can get a hold of a 'never going to change any more' version > of Python, and then code in that 'forever' knowing that a code change > isn't going to come along and break all our stuff. Any version of Python too old even for security patches would qualify. Of course, in a chaotic environment, static code may mean unstatic behavior. Changing internet attacks and changing build environments are the prime reason for extending 2.7 maintenance. > Bug fixes aren't supposed to do this, of course, in the same way that > backporting of features do, but every so often something that was > introduced to fix bug X ends up breaking something else Y. If the > consequences of a bug can be 10s of thousands of Euros lost, you > can see the appeal of 'this isn't going to happen any more'. > > While nobody likes to get bit by bugs, there is some sort of fuzzy > belief out there that the bugs fixes that have gone into 2.7 are > more about things that we would never run into, and thus we get the > risk of change without the benefit of the bugfix. This belief isn't > one that people substantiate -- it is 'just a feeling'. > > So from this corner of the world, which admittedly is a very small corner, > yes, the news is 'Life is good. Please leave us alone.' This is in > large part, I think, due to the belief that 'if things aren't breaking, > things are perfect' which is completely untrue, but that's the way > people are thinking. The extended extended maintenance for 2.7 (from now to 2020) is primarily for security and build fixes. I am beginning to think that the ambiguity of 'secondarily for other fixes, on a case-by-case basis, as determined by the whim of individual core developers' is a disservice to most users as well as most core developers. -- Terry Jan Reedy
Back to comp.lang.python | Previous | Next | Find similar | Unroll thread
Re: Should non-security 2.7 bugs be fixed? Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> - 2015-07-19 17:27 -0400
csiph-web