On Mon, 25 May 2015 17:30:02 -0700 Larry Hastings <larry at hastings.org> wrote: > > So, in all three cases it's work that's been under development for a > while. These people did this work out of the kindness of their hearts, > to make Python better. As a community we want to encourage that and > make sure these developers know we appreciate their efforts. These > people would be happier if the work shipped in 3.5 as opposed to 3.6 so > it got into user's hands sooner. I second that sentiment. But it strikes me that we're doing this because our release frequency is completely inadapted. If we had feature releases, say, every 6 or 9 months, the problem wouldn't really exist in the first place. Exceptions granted by the RM only tackle a very small portion of the problem, because the long delay before an accepted patch being in an official release *still* frustrates everyone, and the unpredictability of exceptions only makes things *more* frustrating for most players. Of course, it was pretty much shut down before: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2012-January/115619.html Regards Antoine.
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