← Back to context Comment by giancarlostoro 1 day ago Makes ya miss having a BDFL. Dang I didn't realize he's 70 now.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guido_van_Rossum 4 comments giancarlostoro Reply zitterbewegung 18 hours ago I wouldn’t recommend running the latest Python in prod. Honestly 3.x.7 releases are the most mature . giancarlostoro 16 hours ago I'm currently in a .NET shop so not an issue for me, makes me wonder if Python will eventually adopt the concept of LTS releases, this could have been avoided as an issue if it was part of a non-LTS release. davidkwast 14 hours ago All Python versions are LTS if you consider 5-year a good measure.https://devguide.python.org/versions/ 1 reply →
zitterbewegung 18 hours ago I wouldn’t recommend running the latest Python in prod. Honestly 3.x.7 releases are the most mature . giancarlostoro 16 hours ago I'm currently in a .NET shop so not an issue for me, makes me wonder if Python will eventually adopt the concept of LTS releases, this could have been avoided as an issue if it was part of a non-LTS release. davidkwast 14 hours ago All Python versions are LTS if you consider 5-year a good measure.https://devguide.python.org/versions/ 1 reply →
giancarlostoro 16 hours ago I'm currently in a .NET shop so not an issue for me, makes me wonder if Python will eventually adopt the concept of LTS releases, this could have been avoided as an issue if it was part of a non-LTS release. davidkwast 14 hours ago All Python versions are LTS if you consider 5-year a good measure.https://devguide.python.org/versions/ 1 reply →
davidkwast 14 hours ago All Python versions are LTS if you consider 5-year a good measure.https://devguide.python.org/versions/ 1 reply →
I wouldn’t recommend running the latest Python in prod. Honestly 3.x.7 releases are the most mature .
I'm currently in a .NET shop so not an issue for me, makes me wonder if Python will eventually adopt the concept of LTS releases, this could have been avoided as an issue if it was part of a non-LTS release.
All Python versions are LTS if you consider 5-year a good measure.
https://devguide.python.org/versions/
1 reply →