Nicholas:

I am relatively new to Python, and my system of choice, IBM i  on POWER, now 
supports Python directly.  The open source movement is so strong that I think 
Python will be just fine.  I've been a system programmer for 35 years, and this 
tooling (along with the 1000's APIs that IBM has put into IBM i (OS/400, 
iSeries, System I,  all the same thing) over the years makes this one of the 
most powerful tools I have in my toolkit.  

Might there be a bit of chaos for a while, sure, there always is when the 
unexpected occurs, however I sympathize with Guido in many ways since 90% of 
people will jump on a target just because it's a target, without even knowing 
or caring about the underlying issue.  It's today's hyper-partisan world where 
the internet shields people from direct contact and thus the responsibility for 
what you say and do.  That's why I always sign my posts with my real name and 
include my company name, to ensure to don't get involved in flame wars etc.  

While I'm genuinely sad to see that Guido chose to bow out under these 
circumstances, I also see a bright future.  Remember, the addition of the POWER 
line of servers in IBM i (yes AIX and Linux run there too) adds a significant 
number of shops that might adopt Python.  That means Python is growing on its 
own. The legacy is written already, it will just get better.  


--
Jim Oberholtzer
Agile Technology Architects


-----Original Message-----
From: Python-list 
[mailto:python-list-bounces+midrangel=agiletecharch....@python.org] On Behalf 
Of Nicholas Cole
Sent: Friday, July 13, 2018 8:54 AM
To: python-list@python.org
Subject: Re: Guido van Rossum resigns as Python leader

On Fri, 13 Jul 2018 at 08:51, Steven D'Aprano <
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info> wrote:

> On Fri, 13 Jul 2018 22:29:29 +1000, Chris Angelico wrote:
>
> > To be quite frank, the proposal would have quietly died on 
> > python-ideas if it hadn't been for Guido's explicit support early 
> > on. (I know this for sure because the same proposal HAS quietly 
> > died, more than once.) The controversy came because the rest of the 
> > world disagreed with Guido, not because of anything that I am capable of in 
> > myself.
>
> I think Guido's post makes it fairly clear that what pushed him over 
> the edge was not the opposition to the PEP in the first place, but 
> (extrapolating from his comments) the levels of abuse he (probably) 
> received privately and on social media after his announcement was made.
>
> The downside of being the visible face of a popular language while 
> having a publicly visible email address.
>
>
Oh people are awful.

I hope (though don’t expect) he will change his mind.

Is it irrational to wonder whether projects should be looking to migrate to new 
languages? This kind of announcement makes me worry for the future.

Nicholas.
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