[I've posted something about this on python-ideas but since I now have some basic working code, I think it is more than an idea.]
I think the uptake of Python 3 is starting to accelerate. That's good. However, there are still millions or maybe billions of lines of Python code that still needs to be ported. It is beneficial to the Python ecosystem if this code can get ported. My idea is to make a stepping stone version of Python, between 2.7.x and 3.x that eases the porting job. The high level goals are: - code coming out of 2to3 runs correctly on this modified Python - code that runs without warnings on this modified Python will run correctly on Python 3.x. Achieving these goals is not technically possible. Still, I want to reduce as much as possible the manual work involved in porting. Incrementally fixing code that generates warnings is a lot easier than trying to fix an entire application or library at once. I have a very early version on github: https://github.com/nascheme/ppython I'm hoping if people find it useful then they would contribute backwards compatibility fixes that help their applications or librarys run. I am currently running a newly 2to3 ported application on it. At this time there is no warning generated but I would rather get a warning then have one of my customers run into a porting bug. To be clear, I'm not proposing that these backwards compatiblity features go into Python 3.x or that this modified Python becomes the standard version. It is purely an intermediate step in getting code ported to Python 3. I've temporarily named it "Pragmatic Python". I'd like a better name if someone can suggest one. Maybe something like Perverted, Debauched or Impure Python. Regards, Neil _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com