To answer Nick's email here, I didn't respond to that initial email because it seemed specifically directed at Guido and not me. On 10/5/05, Guido van Rossum <guido at python.org> wrote: > On 10/5/05, Nick Coghlan <ncoghlan at gmail.com> wrote: > > Anyway, the question is: What do we want to do with ast-branch? Finish > > bringing it up to Python 2.4 equivalence, make it the HEAD, and only then > > implement the approved PEP's (308, 342, 343) that affect the compiler? Or > > implement the approved PEP's on the HEAD, and move the goalposts for > > ast-branch to include those features as well? > > > > I believe the latter is the safe option in terms of making sure 2.5 is a solid > > release, but doing it that way suggests to me that the ast compiler would need > > to be held over until 2.6, which would be somewhat unfortunate. > > > > Given that I don't particularly like that answer, I'd love for someone to > > convince me I'm wrong ;) > > Given the total lack of response, I have a different suggestion. Let's > *abandon* the AST-branch. We're fooling ourselves believing that we > can ever switch to that branch, no matter how theoretically better it > is. > Since the original people who have done the majority of the work (Jeremy, Tim, Neal, Nick, logistix, and myself) have fallen so far behind this probably is not a bad decision. Obviously I would like to see the work pan out, but since I personally just have not found the time to shuttle the branch the rest of the way I really am in no position to say much in terms of objecting to its demise. Maybe I can come up with a new design and get my dissertation out of it. =) -Brett
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