Does someone need an asyncio version more recent than the version in
your Python 3.4 or 3.5 standard library?

I recall a discussion about installing the PyPI version because it is
more recent, and sys.path tricks to use it instead of the stdlib
flavor.

Victor

2016-03-26 0:41 GMT+01:00 Guido van Rossum <[email protected]>:
> Maybe because Python 3.3 is no longer getting new releases either?
> Probably most people just use the asyncio from the stdlib and are
> happy with it.
>
> On Fri, Mar 25, 2016 at 5:37 AM, Victor Stinner
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> * The latest asyncio release is now one year old: asyncio 3.4.3 was
>> released at 2015-03-10.
>> * Python 3.5.1 was released at 2015-12-07.
>> * Python 3.5.0 was released at 2015-09-13.
>>
>> Is there a reason why no new asyncio version was released on the cheese shop?
>>
>> I guess that we have to find the Git tag which matchs Python 3.5.1,
>> write a changelog and build Windows binary wheels?
>>
>> My Windows VM is no more able to build Windows binary wheels. I wrote
>> a script to build all wheel packages in one command on Windows:
>> https://bitbucket.org/haypo/misc/src/default/bin/releaser.py
>>
>> Oh, it looks like asyncio still has an old copy, release.py, which
>> doesn't support Git.
>>
>> Victor
>
>
>
> --
> --Guido van Rossum (python.org/~guido)

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