The future of Python: Concurrency devoured, Node.js next on menu • The Register
'Last December, Python version 3.6 arrived, bringing with it non-provisional support for the asyncio module introduced in Python 3.4. '
'Now that almost all the popular Python packages have been ported to Python 3, doubts about the language have receded into the background. ', "Python and JavaScript are widely used in part because they're easier to pick up than Java, C, C++, and C#."
'Since 2008, the Python community has tried to reconcile incompatibility between Python 2 and newly introduced Python 3. ', "For years, adoption of Python 3 was slow and some even dared to suggest Python didn't have a future."
1 comment
0 u/derram 16 Aug 2017 20:03
https://archive.is/eTrmN | https://files.catbox.moe/yfh9dl.png :
'Last December, Python version 3.6 arrived, bringing with it non-provisional support for the asyncio module introduced in Python 3.4. '
'Now that almost all the popular Python packages have been ported to Python 3, doubts about the language have receded into the background. ', "Python and JavaScript are widely used in part because they're easier to pick up than Java, C, C++, and C#."
'Since 2008, the Python community has tried to reconcile incompatibility between Python 2 and newly introduced Python 3. ', "For years, adoption of Python 3 was slow and some even dared to suggest Python didn't have a future."
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