> On Apr 2, 2018, at 2:13 PM, Antoine Pitrou <solip...@pitrou.net> wrote:
> 
> On Mon, 2 Apr 2018 13:48:46 -0700
> Lukasz Langa <luk...@langa.pl> wrote:
>> Pickle protocol version 4.0 was originally defined back in PEP 3154 and 
>> shipped as part of Python 3.4 back in 2011. Yet it's still not the default.
> 
> Because we want pickles produced with the default to be readable by
> earlier Python 3 versions.
> (the same reason protocol 0 stayed the default throughout the Python 2
> lifetime)

Alright, so that means we can easily do this for Python 3.8, right? I mean, 
following Christian's logic, Python 3.3 is already dead, with its final release 
done in February 2016 and support dropped in September 2017 per PEP 398.

I think we need to get past thinking about "Python 2" vs. "Python 3". This 
frame of mind creates space for another mythical release of Python that will 
break all the compatibilities, something we promised not to do. A moving 
backward compatibility window that includes the last release still under 
security fixes seems like a good new framework for this.

What do you think?

- Ł

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