On Wed, Oct 3, 2012 at 8:43 PM, Larry Hastings <la...@hastings.org> wrote: > Begging for feedback doesn't mean you'll get any,
I received a fair number of complaints from people that wanted to experiment with yield from, but couldn't, because the first alpha wasn't out yet and they weren't sufficiently interested to go to the effort of building their own copy of Python. *People like to try out the new versions*, so I have often received useful feedback during alpha periods - all it takes is one interested person from outside the core development team to get interested in a new feature and we can have a useful conversation. By *refusing* to release the alpha early you are *guaranteeing* I won't get the early feedback I want on the new features that are likely to come in 3.4. That's your prerogative as RM of course, but you haven't given any reason beyond the circular "I don't care about enabling feedback from people that can't or won't build from source, because people that can't or won't build from source don't provide useful feedback". I'm *not* happy about that attitude, because it's based on a blatantly false premise. If it was true, we wouldn't bother with alpha releases *at all*, and instead just skip straight to feature freeze and beta releases. Give me a reason like "I don't want to because I want to concentrate the release management work into a 6 month period", and I'll accept it, but don't try to rationalise it with statements about user feedback that I know from experience to be untrue. Regards, Nick. -- Nick Coghlan | ncogh...@gmail.com | Brisbane, Australia _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com