Hi Lee,

There is a list of *all* changes in the release notes and a summary of
backward incompatible changes there as well:
https://github.com/sympy/sympy/wiki/Release-Notes-for-1.5#backwards-compatibility-breaks-and-deprecations

I think it is hard to predict the effect of some of those changes just
from the description though so I really recommend trying out the new
version with your code if possible.

Oscar

On Sat, 30 Nov 2019 at 00:21, Lee Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Oscar:  Great Job and Good News.
>
> Will there be a site which has a list of deprecated and major changes?  
> Kindly provide a link.
> Happy Holidays to the Sympy Team
>
> Terry Lee Deglow-Smith
>
> On Fri, Nov 29, 2019 at 1:34 AM Oscar Benjamin <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
>>
>> Hi SymPy users and contributors,
>>
>> It is my pleasure to announce the *release candidate* of SymPy 1.5. This is
>> is intended for advance testing but if there are no regressions
>> reported then there will be no changes to this before the 1.5 final
>> release.
>>
>> The final release will be in around a week unless regressions are
>> reported so please test this now to ensure that any possible
>> regressions affecting your code or downstream projects are fixed
>> beforehand.
>>
>> I have just made version 1.5rc1 available to install as a pre-release
>> from PyPI. You can install this with
>>
>>     $ pip install --pre sympy
>>
>> The release notes for SymPy 1.5 can be found here:
>> https://github.com/sympy/sympy/wiki/Release-Notes-for-1.5
>>
>> Note that there are some features that are deprecated and also some
>> changes that are not backwards compatible. We try to ensure backwards
>> compatibility and to use a deprecation process wherever possible.
>> However it is not always possible to avoid potentially breaking
>> changes.
>>
>> Note also that SymPy 1.5 drops support for Python 3.4 and most
>> importantly will be the last release of SymPy that supports Python
>> 2.7. This makes it especially important to try and avoid regressions
>> in this release so I hope that it gets as much pre-release testing as
>> possible.
>>
>> Issues with the release should be reported on Github (make sure to
>> specify if the issue is a regression since 1.4):
>> https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues
>>
>> The SHA256 hashes for the release files are:
>>
>> abc76c62593c80cafacc9e3cf80e71f9da15b27871cf77a8ed6c18e2e4c017da
>> sympy-1.5rc1-py2.py3-none-any.whl
>> a04dda54ad26e406d2e169d29500803556c5d28562d7c47f9d5b31bb9d3a840f
>> sympy-1.5rc1.tar.gz
>>
>> Happy testing,
>> Oscar
>>
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