top | item 22765014

(no title)

brettcannon | 6 years ago

I'm not sure how old you are, but if you don't know the name "Borland" you might not realize how novel it is to have a compiler on every major OS. While Python's age means it has been around to see a lot of changes occur, that also means it had pre-existing practices and code to also consider whenever a shift in the industry occurred. Plus in hindsight things look obvious, but during the transition it isn't obvious what will stick and what won't.

It's pretty remarkable that things have continued to function since my 17 years with Python alone have seen things like:

- Compilers becoming available on all OSs - Linux becoming a thing - Laptops becoming common - Smartphones - Web-based email clients

As I have said a few times in comments on this thread, it's fine to feel like there's room for improvement, but trying to "stick it" to Python and its packaging ecosystem in some way for not being perfect is pointless for you and demotivating for those who are actually in a position to try to make things better for you (and even if you aren't a Python user you should care to some extent about it as Instagram runs on Python and thus it is helping to deliver you those cat photos while you're stuck at home ).

discuss

order

jshen|6 years ago

I’ve been doing this for over 20 years. It’s no excuse, python should have a solution.

toyg|5 years ago

It sounds a bit more understandable if you rephrase it as "a small group of largely unpaid volunteers should find a solution for which millions of users and several billion-dollar businesses will happily abandon their current long-running and well-tested solutions".