On Tue, Jan 14, 2014 at 6:22 PM, Bob Martin <bob.mar...@excite.com> wrote: > Does any Linux distro ship with Python 3? I haven't seen one.
On most Debian-based distros, you can simply 'apt-get install python3', and you'll get some 3.x version (in Debian Squeeze, that's 3.1, Debian Wheezy packages 3.2; Ubuntu since Raring gives you 3.3). Whether or not you actually have it - or python2 for that matter - installed depends on your choices, anything that depends on it will pull it in or you can grab it manually. Arch Linux ships 3.3.3 under the name "python", and 2.7.6 under the name "python2" - an inversion of the Debian practice. Other distros are looking toward shifting, too. I'd guess that all mainstream distributions carry both branches. It's just a question of what people get when they ask for "Python" in the most normal way to do that. ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list