No. Python3 delivers concrete improvements on accepted problems with python2. Just the async io and encoding improvements with python 3 justify it. It continues the design spirit that drew devs to python.
When a loved platform stops evolving, as python2 has, there is this lovely period when it continues to be awesome, while requiring you to learn nothing new. Python is here now. But come the day that my new Linux distro links to 3 over 2, I will get organised to move.
When a loved platform stops evolving, as python2 has, there is this lovely period when it continues to be awesome, while requiring you to learn nothing new. Python is here now. But come the day that my new Linux distro links to 3 over 2, I will get organised to move.