[Michael Bayer, 2011-01-09]
> The 0.6 series is not surprisingly our most successful series ever,
> with SQLA 0.6.5 racking up 36,000 downloads from Pypi in a period of
> 76 days, approximately 15K per month, plus about 2K a month from
> Sourceforge.
+ at least 4241 installations via .deb files (n
On 09/01/2011 16:25, Michael Bayer wrote:
The limitations of distutils are also troubling here. In my own work app, we
use pip in conjunction with a Makefile and for the SQLAlchemy install the flag
is on in the Makefile. In that regard the flag being off by default doesn't
feel like that b
I remain a little nervous about the C extensions, not as much because the
current code is unreliable, but because I'd like there to be a whole lot more C
code here. I've used the existing C extensions quite a bit and done tons of
profiling - they really don't account for the vast majority of
Hi Mike,
On 1/9/11 00:14 , Michael Bayer wrote:
The majority of my time is now spent developing 0.7, which is nearly ready for
beta releases pending a few more little features I'd like to try to get in.
0.7 is really exciting with its new event API, lots of other nice touches and
of course t
Happy New Year, SQLAlchemy 0.6.6 is now available. This release features
another long list of tweaks, fixes, and small enhancements, piling up since our
last release in October.
The 0.6 series is not surprisingly our most successful series ever, with SQLA
0.6.5 racking up 36,000 downloads f