Depends what you are thinking of by ‘officially support’.

We have ports for

python26 @2.6.9_7 (lang)
    An interpreted, object-oriented programming language

python27 @2.7.16_2 (lang)
    An interpreted, object-oriented programming language

python27-bootstrap @2.7.16_2 (lang)
    An interpreted, object-oriented programming language

python32 @3.2.6_8 (lang)
    An interpreted, object-oriented programming language

python33 @3.3.7_3 (lang)
    An interpreted, object-oriented programming language

python34 @3.4.10_2 (lang)
    An interpreted, object-oriented programming language

python35 @3.5.7_1 (lang)
    An interpreted, object-oriented programming language

python36 @3.6.9_1 (lang)
    An interpreted, object-oriented programming language

python37 @3.7.4_1 (lang)
    An interpreted, object-oriented programming language

However, that does not mean each of the various ‘py’ ports support all of the 
above..

Chris



> On 12 Sep 2019, at 9:09 pm, Bjarne D Mathiesen <macint...@mathiesen.info> 
> wrote:
> 
> Which versions of Python do macports still officially support ?!?
> 
> -- 
> Bjarne D Mathiesen
> Korsør ; Danmark ; Europa
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> denne besked er skrevet i et (næsten) M$-frit miljø
> MacOS X 10.13.6 High Sierra :
>   17" 2011 MacBook Pro ; 2.8GHz Intel Core i7 ; 16GB 1067MHz DDR3
>   2012 Mac Pro ; 2 x 3.46GHz 6-Core Xeon ; 48GB
> MacOS X 10.6.8 Snow Leopard :
>   Mac Mini ; 2GHz Core 2 Duo (64 bit) ; 4GB (3GB actual) 667MHz
>   Mac Mini ; 1.83GHz Core Duo (32 bit) ; 2GB 667Mhz

Attachment: smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature

Reply via email to