Python 3.13 release, an overview of its major features
Posted by janodusho@reddit | programming | View on Reddit | 8 comments
Posted by janodusho@reddit | programming | View on Reddit | 8 comments
agustin689@reddit
Your .bat files never looked better!
lanzkron@reddit
This is huge, HUGE, I say!
redundantmerkel@reddit
Ctrl z will pause the process and not terminate, is that your intent? Usually you'd do a ctrl d to close the input stream and it'll quit.
lanzkron@reddit
Exiting the Python interpreter is ctrl D on Linux and ctrl Z on windows.
redundantmerkel@reddit
Ah gotcha, I don't use windows. In linux ctrl z will put the process in a paused state and it'll not release resources. Then ctrl d will end the input steam, which python knows about, and quits.
Good luck with windows!
lood9phee2Ri@reddit
Shrug. https://docs.python.org/3/whatsnew/3.13.html
shevy-java@reddit
I was misinformed!!!
https://bash-org-archive.com/?400459
I don't object to python getting better, but I think rather than an as-is feature list that is copy/pasted, people in reallife scenarios need to evaluate python, specifically in regards to any issue that may arise - such as pypi/setuptools and software that can not as easily be installed anymore. In particular pypi really needs to rethink its verbose deprecation notices. Python 3.11.x worked better for me than 3.12.x so I am still on the 3.11.x branch; I'll give 3.13 a try in a few days but 3.12.x made me somewhat wary of upgrading.
janodusho@reddit (OP)
This is not an article to recommend an upgrade to Python 3.13. It informs about the new features of the 3.13 release.