Hi, list!

Yet another sprint successfully finished, so here's a status update about what's been achived and what's on the menu for the next one.

In the past sprint, the main new content was support for Qt 4.7 beta 1 [1]. This was successfully done: if you want to try out some Declarative UI goodness with a Python backend, get the latest and greatest Qt and PySide and enjoy!

In other news, a horde of bugs was squashed, and last but not least, the biggest blocker for porting PySide to Windows (the "#define protected public" hack) is not required any longer. According to our understanding, no major issues preventing a complete Windows port should exist any longer. May the hacking commence! :-)

In the sprint starting today, the very first thing is to make a new release to get the latest features in the hand of developers and platform porters not interested in working with the git snapshots. The release should happen on Monday, at the latest.

The major new functionality, actually filling the rest of the sprint, is the implementation of API 2. We hope to finish this completely within this sprint (two weeks), after which we should have all Python 2.x functionality present for a 1.0 release.

Since the sprint was completely filled by API 2 stuff, Python 3 work has been postponed after that. We hope to start investigating that after this sprint.

[1] http://labs.trolltech.com/blogs/2010/05/06/qt-470-beta1/

Cheers, ma.
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