Guido van Rossum wrote:

Python 3.0 (a.k.a. "Python 3000" or "Py3k") represents a major milestone in
Python's history, and was nearly three years in the making.  This is a new
version of the language that is incompatible with the 2.x line of releases,

I think this

while remaining true to BDFL Guido van Rossum's vision.  Some things you
will notice include:

* Fixes to many old language warts
* Removal of long deprecated features and redundant syntax
* Improvements in, and a reorganization of, the standard library
* Changes to the details of how built-in objects like strings and dicts work
* ...and many more new features

While these changes were made without concern for backward compatibility,

and this could give some people a mis-impression, most likely negative, as to the magnitude and nature of the change. Most of the code I am now writing would, I believe, run with 2.5 except for print(..., file=xxx). And I know that there was concern for backward compatibility to the point that some changes were rejected (renaming builtins) or delayed (deleting duplicate test asserts) for that reason. So I would soften the statements to "... version of the language that is partially incompatible with... " and "were made without being bound by backward compatibility,"

tjr

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