Hi,
Could you please tell us a bit more about what the specs say about numbers
in the top-level domain?
Claude
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Thanks a lot!
Yes I think the documentation can improve a bit to make it more clear
that this extension can be done.
I'll have a look at that in the next days.
Cheers
Yann
On 10/29/19 4:48 PM, Adam Johnson wrote:
That looks good to me. To avoid mutating Django's default setting
(though it'
Hello,
Also, as far as I know, the URLValidator is intended to catch common
mistakes of people typing URLs in text fields rather than to enforce
strictly a standard.
Best regards,
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Aymeric.
Le mer. 30 oct. 2019 à 08:40, Claude Paroz a écrit :
> Hi,
>
> Could you please tell us a bit more a
Hi all.
In November last year we added official Python 3.7 support to Django 1.11.
https://groups.google.com/d/topic/django-developers/H7fP5w0YU2I/discussion
This was 18 months after release, and well into the extended support
period.
There had been a long-line of requests to add that suppor
Sorry typo there. Should say:
> Django 2.2 officially only supports up to Python 3.7.
Otherwise the issue doesn't make sense.
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tl;dr: I'm in favor of officially supporting 3.8, if it looks like it won't
be so hard to do (and especially if doing so will result in a net decrease
in the support burden).
Long answer:
I'm not sure if this was prompted in part by my question in #django-dev...
but consider me one of the people
Not so much prompted, as reminded. It's already on my mind... I've a lot of
"Add Python 3.8 support" in various places the last couple of weeks...
That _highly recommend_ sentence could go:
> We highly recommend and only officially support the latest point release
of each support Python serie
On Wed, Oct 30, 2019 at 12:29 PM Carlton Gibson
wrote:
> That _highly recommend_ sentence could go:
>
> > We highly recommend and only officially support the latest point release
> of each support Python series.
>
👏 Love it! (though perhaps drop or edit the second "support")
Tobias
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I'm also in favour of adding 3.8 support and backporting 3.9 support
assuming it's not a huge change!
On Wed, 30 Oct 2019 at 16:39, Tobias McNulty wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 30, 2019 at 12:29 PM Carlton Gibson
> wrote:
>
>> That _highly recommend_ sentence could go:
>>
>> > We highly recommend and on
I think that the main reason for supporting Python 3.7 in Django 1.11 was
to help make things easier for those migrating from Python 2 to 3.
Python 3.8 was only released ~3 months before the Python 2 EOL, so most
people in the last year and up to the end of this year will likely migrate
to Pyth
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