Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> writes: > > Things are looking as if this might actually happen. > > I have one concern: an awful large number of patches went into 2.2.1 > in a very short time, and I worry a bit that one release candidate may > not be sufficient to make sure that we really didn't introduce any new > bugs. I think the time argument may be a red herring; I'm not sure there are so many people checking the branch out that it really makes any difference. But I agree there have been a lot of changes, and some pretty subtle ones. > Perhaps we should consider to issue a second release candidate, > or at least have a waiting time longer than 1 week between rc and > final. (I'd be happy with 2 weeks.) How about releasing 2.2.1c1, waiting two weeks and then deciding whether we need a c2? In an ideal world, changing the candidate release into a final release would just be a matter of changing version numbers. Two weeks gets us pretty near Easter; I may not be around so much for the Easter weekend. Cheers, M. -- I've reinvented the idea of variables and types as in a programming language, something I do on every project. -- Greg Ward, September 1998
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