On Tue, Feb 02, 2016 at 09:40:52AM -0500, Barry Warsaw wrote: > On Feb 02, 2016, at 03:33 PM, Ezio Melotti wrote: > > >Changing the major version should be done for incompatible changes, and just > >doing it after 3.9 will probably just create confusion for both users that > >will wonder if it's incompatible with Python 3 and for things like the > >executable name. Hopefully we won't need to jump to Python 4 for a long > >time. > > Changing the major version number is a much bigger political and psychological > step than just bumping 3 to 4. I say let's put it off as long as possible, > and there's nothing wrong with two digit minor versions.
It will break any code that does if sys.version < "3.3": ... for example. Sure, people shouldn't do that, but they will. Are there any other languages or systems which bumped the major version number while keeping language changes relatively minor? I can think of a couple of examples of languages which bumped the major version number without making big disruptive changes: * Python 1.5 -> 2.0 (technically there was a 1.6 in there as well, but that wasn't used by many people). Admittedly, fewer people used Python back then, and the version bump wasn't following a similiar, but backwards incompatible, version bump. * PHP 5.x -> 7.0. I count nine feature removals, but none of them look big. http://php.net/ChangeLog-7.php * Java major version bumps are rarely backwards incompatible, as far as I can tell. I had a Java developer explain to me that he treats the N in "Java N" as effectively a minor release number. The point being, I'm not entirely sure I agree that a major version bump would *necessarily* be considered a big deal, let alone a barrier to adoption. It might be nice to have a really big feature added in 4.0 to justify the version bump, but I don't think it's a "Must Do". Having 4.0 being a lightweight evolutionary step up from 3.9 might even reassure people that we're back to normal operating practice, without the extraordinary 2->3 transition. -- Steve _______________________________________________ python-committers mailing list python-committers@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-committers