Also, just replacing the version number in the URL works for the python 3 series (use 3.X even for python 3.0), even farther back than the drop down menu allows.
This does not help in this case: https://docs.python.org/3.4/library/asyncio-task.html#asyncio.ensure_future Also, you cannot select the docs for a maintenance release, like 3.4.3. Anyway, it’s not a big deal as long as significant changes are tagged appropriately with notes like “New in version NNN”, which they are. Ideally, the docs would only show the latest changes for released versions of Python, but since some changes (like the one I linked to) are introduced in maintenance versions, it’s probably hard to separate them out into separate branches. Nick On Wed, Jun 10, 2015 at 10:11 AM Nicholas Chammas < nicholas.cham...@gmail.com> wrote: > For example, here is a "New in version 3.4.4" method: > > https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio-task.html#asyncio.ensure_future > > However, the latest release appears to be 3.4.3: > > https://www.python.org/downloads/ > > Is this normal, or did the 3.4.4 docs somehow get published early by > mistake? > > Nick > >
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