Hi all, I'm thinking about making a release of SymPy 1.11. Until now I've been too busy at work to make a release but things are beginning to ease up at the end of the academic year. We're already at the point where we're getting new reports for bugs that were fixed months ago so a new release would be good: https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/23639
Does anyone know of anything that should be done before issuing a new release? Are there any significant pull requests etc that should be merged? Is there any work that is incomplete and should be fixed first? Of course we have GSOC projects underway so potentially it's good to wait until that's over but that would delay the next release by a long time (there's usually some unfinished work so it's not as simple as just releasing as soon as GSOC is over). Another possibility here would be to make a release branch, put out a beta release and let that sit for a while to collect bug fixes. Pre-releases don't seem to get that much downstream testing though (but maybe that's because they aren't used consistently by SymPy). A few minor fixes have been made for Python 3.11 so it would be good to get out a new release before 3.11 comes out. We're still in the 3.11 beta cycle though so there's the potential for more fixes to be needed by the time of 3.11 final. Oscar -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sympy" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sympy+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sympy/CAHVvXxS0MvFbhc2J%2B7VcyLsft4hLZH2%2BuqgL8XEHhiEyYm3Lng%40mail.gmail.com.