Re: Django 3.0 Released.

2019-12-05 Thread אורי
Packages should not drop support for Django LTS versions which are still supported by Django. This is a mistake. I never had problems with using Django 1.11 LTS with our packages on Speedy Net. On the other hand, support for Django 2.0 by some packages was very late, sometimes after Django 2.1

Re: Django 3.0 Released.

2019-12-05 Thread Shaheed Haque
On that subject... On Thu, 5 Dec 2019, 15:12 Jonathan Morgan, wrote: > Another thing to consider is whether you need to update the packages you > use to build your application. I've found that support for the LTS version > of django is not consistent across packages, where support for the

Re: Django 3.0 Released.

2019-12-05 Thread Jonathan Morgan
Another thing to consider is whether you need to update the packages you use to build your application. I've found that support for the LTS version of django is not consistent across packages, where support for the latest version is much more consistent, such that sometimes a needed update to

Re: Django 3.0 Released.

2019-12-04 Thread Andréas Kühne
So your question is if you should use LTS versions or use the latest blazing version. The answer is of course - it depends. Do you see anything in django 3 that you need to have? In that case - upgrade to django 3. If you only want to make sure that your application is safe and secure and you

Re: Django 3.0 Released.

2019-12-02 Thread o1bigtenor
On Mon, Dec 2, 2019 at 6:18 AM Carlton Gibson wrote: > > Django 3.0 is now available. > > https://www.djangoproject.com/weblog/2019/dec/02/django-3-released/ > > With the release of Django 3.0, Django 2.2 has reached the end of > mainstream support. The final minor bug fix release (which is also

Django 3.0 Released.

2019-12-02 Thread Carlton Gibson
Django 3.0 is now available. https://www.djangoproject.com/weblog/2019/dec/02/django-3-released/ With the release of Django 3.0, Django 2.2 has reached the end of mainstream support. The final minor bug fix release (which