Hi everyone, I'm trying to understand what the "official" release history is right now. PythonNet 2.0 was never officially released, correct? Was the last release 2.0 beta?
In any case, I think it would be great if we released an official 2.0 version, provided binaries for download etc. My gut sense is that there would be significant benefits of releasing the current version + any major bug fixes as is, i.e. hold off from adding any new features. The current version seems to be used by a fair number of people and useful to them, and I think it would be good to have something officially released as quickly as possible. But, I don't know the codebase nor history well, so please chime in if you think that is a silly suggestion. Version 2.1 then could incorporate the various work people have done on forks of the project and maybe get setup.py to work on all supported platforms. We could also clean up some of the old files, docs etc for that release. In my mind such versions 2.0 and 2.1 could happen relatively quickly, i.e. don't be multi months projects but more like a few weeks at most. In general I think once we get setup/deployment via pip running, it would make sense to release new versions fairly frequently, even if they only add a few new features. Any thoughts? Best, David _________________________________________________ Python.NET mailing list - PythonDotNet@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pythondotnet