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| Started by | Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> |
|---|---|
| First post | 2015-10-01 19:59 -0400 |
| Last post | 2015-10-01 19:59 -0400 |
| Articles | 1 — 1 participant |
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Re: The Nikola project is deprecating Python 2.7 (+2.x/3.x user survey results) Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> - 2015-10-01 19:59 -0400
| From | Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2015-10-01 19:59 -0400 |
| Subject | Re: The Nikola project is deprecating Python 2.7 (+2.x/3.x user survey results) |
| Message-ID | <mailman.325.1443743960.28679.python-list@python.org> |
On 10/1/2015 12:26 PM, Chris Warrick wrote: > The Nikola developers decided to deprecate Python 2.7 support. > Starting with v7.7.2, Nikola will display a warning if Python 2.7 is > used (but it will still be fully supported). In early 2016, Nikola > v8.0.0 will come out, and that release will not support Python 2.7 > officially. How sane ;-) > The decision was made on the basis of a user survey, with 138 > participants. The vast majority of them claimed that they either use > Python 3 already, or can switch really easily. From the survey and description below, 'using Python 3' means having Python 3 installed, not writing Python 3 code. Correct? I must admit that I am surprised that even 7% of those who bothered to answer would claim that they would refuse to even install Py 3. > The main reason for the > switch was the fact that supporting both requires a lot of extra > effort, especially because Python 2.7’s Unicode support is abysmal. 2.7 unicode bug-fixing pretty much ended a couple of years ago or so. Remaining bugs either have or eventually will be closed as fixed in 3.x. > Full results: https://getnikola.com/blog/env-survey-results-and-the-future-of-python-27.html > > What is Nikola? > =============== > > Nikola is a static site and blog generator, written in Python. > It can use Mako and Jinja2 templates, and input in many popular markup > formats, such as reStructuredText and Markdown — and can even turn > Jupyter (IPython) Notebooks into blog posts! It also supports image > galleries, and is multilingual. Nikola is flexible, and page builds > are extremely fast, courtesy of doit (which is rebuilding only what > has been changed). > > Find out more at the website: https://getnikola.com/ -- Terry Jan Reedy
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