Hi,

thanks for the info.

Hmmm just looked at

  http://genshi.edgewall.org/query

and found 108 bugs open so ... it seems that there 
are bugs to be fixed.

Ah, and according to 

  http://genshi.edgewall.org/ticket/602

python 3.5 seems to be broken (last ticket change 4 Months ago).

I will not switch to 3.5 tomorrow :-), but when I switch
to python 3.x I will switch directly to 3.5,
so I hope Trac will work with python 3.5 at that moment.

Otherwise Trac is a really great project which I like and use :-)

Cheers

  Anton

Torge Riedel wrote:

> Am 17.01.2016 um 10:38 schrieb anton:
>> Hi,
>>
>> last week I had a bug which prevented me to
>> add an attachment on a trac wiki page.
>>
>> I found out that Genshi was the reason.
>>
>> The work around was to switch the prefferred language
>> to english insted of using the default
>> language (my default language is german).
>>
>> Sorry ... I do not find the trac ticket for this bug actually :-(
>>
>> But my question is:
>>
>> Since Genshi does not seem to be developped actively anymore
>> ( on http://genshi.edgewall.org/browser the last change is 14 months ago
>> ) what is the future of Genshi ... and Trac of course.
>>
>> Are there plans to support Jinja or some other template
>> engine?
>>
>> I am still on python 2.7 but I will try to move to python 3.5 in the
>> next time, so it would be interesting if python 3.5 is supported too.
>>
>> Thanks for a hint.
>>
>> Anton
>>
> 
> Hi,
> 
> I faced this bug too on december when upgrading trac at my company to
> v1.0.9 and all related stuff. The trick is to avoid downloading and
> installing a package of Genshi from the download page, but install from
> repository url http://svn.edgewall.org/repos/genshi/branches/stable/0.7.x/
> which contains some additional bug fixes. Including the one you ran in.
> I've found this by finding the related bug ticket and commit in the svn to
> see, that it has been merged to this stable branch.
> 
> Too me (as project leader / software developer in business) this is
> confusing and not very helpful too, cause IMHO if I fix a bug causing
> troubles, I will release a bug fix version as soon as possible and provide
> a download for it. But this is as everything in the world: Just one
> opinion of how to work. There are other approaches we have to live with
> (or not).
> 
> At least with trac this went better (IMHO) the last year(s) when several
> bug fix versions were released. This is still ongoing and I hope this is
> kept in the future. Since it makes it easier to tell which version you
> have installed.
> 
> If a project (like Genshi) does not have much (or no) commits in the past
> months, this does not mean it is not actively developed. It might be the
> case, that this project has no enhancement / bugs waiting to be fixed. But
> I can't really tell for Genshi whether this is the case or not. However -
> it (trac+Genshi) is for free and has a big community and helpful guys
> (like RjOllos) and that is what counts to me and makes it worth to be
> used.
> 
> No knowledge on my side regarding Jinja / python 3.5
> 
> Regards
> Torge
> 


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