[Python-Dev] Re: Questions about about the DLS 2020

2020-11-26 Thread Koos Zevenhoven
I've had some things going on, and I'm still trying to catch up with the discussions here. Can someone tell me what would be the best place to look at the most recent proposal? Is one of the PEPs up to date? On Mon, Nov 16, 2020 at 7:02 PM Tobias Kohn wrote: > Hi Mark, > > Thank you for your int

[Python-Dev] Re: Questions about about the DLS 2020

2020-11-26 Thread Tobias Kohn
Hi Koos, Yes, our three PEPs (634/635/636) are up to date.  PEP 634 is the technical specification, so you probably want to start with the tutorial (PEP 636) or the rationale (PEP 635). https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0636/ https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0635/ Perhaps the followi

[Python-Dev] Thanks for the Dev Guide

2020-11-26 Thread Richard Levasseur
Hi everyone, I just wanted to express some appreciation for the excellent Dev Guide. I don't use git or github much, but the dev guide got me from not knowing where to start, to having a PR out for review in a couple hours. It walked me through...pretty much perfectly. Getting a CLA signed was a

[Python-Dev] Re: Thanks for the Dev Guide

2020-11-26 Thread Larry Hastings
The dev guide is a community project, like all of Python.  But IIRC the person who drove it and did I think most of the heavy lifting on it was Brett Cannon. And yes, it /is/ excellent, isn't it :D //arry/ On 11/26/20 11:28 AM, Richard Levasseur wrote: Hi everyone, I just wanted to expre

[Python-Dev] Re: Thanks for the Dev Guide

2020-11-26 Thread Brett Cannon
The first versions of the devguide and the CLA bot are me, but tons of people have helped out over the years with both of these things and our dev process overall who share in the thanks. 😊 And glad the process went well for you, Richard! On Thu, Nov 26, 2020 at 11:54 AM Larry Hastings wrote: >

[Python-Dev] [RELEASE] Python 3.9.1rc1 is now ready for testing

2020-11-26 Thread Łukasz Langa
Python 3.9.1rc1 is the release candidate of the first maintenance release of Python 3.9. Go get it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-391rc1/ Assuming no critical problems are found prior to 2020-12-11, the currently sc