Am 23.06.2015 um 22:37 schrieb Jason Moore:
Ubuntu 12.04 is crossed out in the page but it is supported until April
2017 (and is still the version Travis uses). We likely need to support
12.04 Python versions longer.
Ah right, I somehow picked the "HWE date" from the minor upgrade lines.
Fixed. (Also fixed the end date for RHEL6.)
Though Ubuntu still isn't who's keeping 2.7 alive for the longest period
of time, that's still Debian 8 and RHEL6, which will provide it until
2020. 2.7 is going to be really ancient by that time... and maybe we'll
decide that distro support isn't going to be the most useful metric by then.
Please feel free to add more metrics to the wiki page if you know any!
I don't think there is much reason for dropping Python 3.3 as you suggest.
I meant to say we *can* drop it, not that we *should*.
Also I'm pretty sure one or the other distro will have it. The list is
incomplete after all.
It is still not that old and there aren't any big technical reasons we
shouldn't support it.
Definitely.
Also, it's going to be much easier to say "we support versions from w to
z" instead of "we support versions w, y, and z", the latter is bound to
be confusing.
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