> In the FreeBSD world (where I also participate), there is no such thing as > an "experimental" release, such as the linux world might have. All > "RELEASES" are stable, by definition. That's part of why it moves slower. That's what I like to believe of Python's "final" releases, too. > There was just an announcement of a "Developer Preview" of 5.0, which is > still 6 months away most likely. It is however, kept separate from the > standard releases. This is the warning that accompanied the announcement: > > ***************************** WARNING ******************************** > > This is a development snapshot, and may include serious software > bugs. Do not install this on a machine where important data may be > put at risk. In addition, a number of debugging options are turned on > by default, so the poor performance of this snapshot should not set > expectations for the final release of 5.0. > > ********************************************************************** How is this different from an alpha or beta release? --Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)
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