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Re: "More About Unicode in Python 2 and 3"

Started byTerry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
First post2014-01-06 17:07 -0500
Last post2014-01-06 17:07 -0500
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  Re: "More About Unicode in Python 2 and 3" Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> - 2014-01-06 17:07 -0500

#63354 — Re: "More About Unicode in Python 2 and 3"

FromTerry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
Date2014-01-06 17:07 -0500
SubjectRe: "More About Unicode in Python 2 and 3"
Message-ID<mailman.5072.1389046051.18130.python-list@python.org>
On 1/6/2014 7:39 AM, Ned Batchelder wrote:

> You are still talking about whether Armin is right, and whether he
> writes well, about flaws in his statistics, etc.

That is how *I* decide whether someone is worth attending to. He failed.

 > I'm talking about the fact that an organization

of volunteers

> (Python core development) has a product

given away for free, with a liberal license that allows derivative products

> (Python 3) that is getting bad press.

Inevitable and nothing new.

> (Armin, Kenneth, and others) are unhappy.

There are many unhappy people in the world. Some will be unhappy no 
matter what.

> What is being done to make them happy?

Huh? What are they doing to make core developers happy?

>Who is working with them?

You? Really the wrong question. Which of 'them' is working with us -- in 
a respectful manner -- through established means? (See my response to 
Ethan about what 'unhappy customers' failed to do for a year.)

> I'm talking about making customers happy.

Python has 'customers' around the world. I am more am more concerned 
with helping poor kids in Asia, Africa, and Latin America than with 
well-off professional developers in Latin-alphabet regions.

A certain person is unhappy with a feature of 3.3+. When we fixed the 
first ostensible problem he identified, without his help, he found other 
reasons to be unhappy with the feature. When we voluntarily fix more of 
the ostensible problems with Python 3, which we will, without help from 
most of the 'unhappy customers', I expect that some of them will also 
continue to be unhappy customers. Some of them are opposed to the 
fundamental changes in Python 3 and will never be happy with it.

-- 
Terry Jan Reedy

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