On Tuesday, March 13, 2012 at 9:31 AM, Paul Moore wrote: > On 13 March 2012 03:48, C. Titus Brown <ctb at msu.edu (mailto:ctb at msu.edu)> wrote: > > I feel like there's a middle ground where stable, long-term go-to modules could > > be mentioned, though. I don't spend a lot of time browsing PyPI, but I suspect > > almost everyone spends a certain amount of time in the Python docs (which is a > > testimony to their quality IMO). So I'm in favor of conservative link-outs > > but without any deprecating language. > > > > > I applaud the idea of promoting the many excellent packages available. > It can be very hard to separate the good from the indifferent (or even > bad) when browsing PyPI. I've found some very good packages recently > which I'd never have known about without some random comment on a > mailing list. > > However, I'm not keen on having the stdlib documentation suggest that > I should be using something else. No code should ever be documenting > "don't use me, there are better alternatives" unless it is deprecated > or obsolete. > > On the other hand, I would love to see a community-maintained document > that described packages that are acknowledged as "best of breed". That > applies whether or not those packages replace something in the stdlib. > Things like pywin32, lxml, and requests would be examples in my > experience. There's no reason this *has* to be in the core > documentation - it may be relevant that nothing has sprung up > independently yet... > > http://python-guide.org ? > > Maybe a separate item in the Python documentation, "External Modules", > could be created and maintained by the community? By being in the > documentation, it has a level of "official recommendation" status, and > by being a top-level document it's visible (more so than, for example, > a HOWTO document would be). Because it's in the released > documentation, it is relatively stable, which implies that external > modules would need to have a genuine track record to get in there, but > because it's community maintained it should reflect a wider consensus > than just the core developers' views. > > Paul. > _______________________________________________ > Python-Dev mailing list > Python-Dev at python.org (mailto:Python-Dev at python.org) > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev > Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/donald.stufft%40gmail.com > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/attachments/20120313/6bc1ac90/attachment.html>
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