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Add Plyara name and link to list#210

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takluyver merged 2 commits intopython3statement:masterfromCAM-Gerlach:add-plyara
May 4, 2019

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@CAM-Gerlach
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@CAM-GerlachCAM-Gerlach commentedMay 3, 2019
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Fixes#180 .@utkonos please review and confirm.

I could add you to the schedule, but I'll need to know more specifics and it seems its only used for larger projects with a large number of users or back-dependencies, since it takes up a lot of space on the page.

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No problem. We dropped 2 and release a 3-only version 2.0.0 on Feb 1, 2019.

@CAM-Gerlach
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@takluyver Opinion on adding another entry to the schedule?

@hugovk
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@CAM-Gerlach
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CAM-Gerlach commentedMay 4, 2019
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@hugovk Thanks, I do know how to do it :) (see#141 and#209 ) What I was asking was (as a followup to what I brought up with@takluyver previously) whether it was worthwhile to do for a project that doesn't really have the same order of magnitude of either direct users or other projects dependent on it as almost every other package listed in the schedule section, particularly given one minimal schedule line takes up nearly the space that 4-5 logos do on the list above, and at much higher density.

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I have some concern over how big the timeline is getting (#46), but we haven't figured out any neat solution yet, and I don't want to randomly stop adding projects that want to be listed on there. So I'm happy for it to keep growing until someone has a better idea. ;-)

@takluyvertakluyver merged commit81cdf04 intopython3statement:masterMay 4, 2019
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Thanks

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CAM-Gerlach commentedMay 4, 2019
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@takluyver ,@utkonos did not have the opportunity to double-check and approve the timeline, particularly since I hadn't yet been provided the full information I'd requested and had to make some assumptions.

Again,@utkonos , what I've been asking is

how long have you supported Python 3before you dropped Python 2 support, or with what approx release?

As (what I thought was) a temporary stopgap, I put in the date of your 1.2.0 release, listed as the first one of the community maintainedplyara, reasoning that was when a version was officially released fully supporting Python 3. Is that correct? Also, in addition to my previous question, is 2020-01-01 fine as an end date for 2.x for now, or do you have something more specific in mind? Thanks.

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Sorry, I'm trigger happy on the merge button today. Feel free to make another PR if it needs changing.

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Np.@utkonos , just lmk if it needs any changes and I'll make them in a new PR. Thanks.

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utkonos commentedMay 4, 2019 via email

I think I have answered this already. Here it is again: version 2.0.0 thatwe released on February 1 was a rewrite of the project in python 3. Wedecided to drop 2 support at that time.
On Sat, May 4, 2019, 06:50 CAM Gerlach ***@***.***> wrote:@utkonos <https://github.com/utkonos> did not check and approve the timeline! Again,@utkonos <https://github.com/utkonos> , what I've been asking you is how long have you supported Python 3 *before* you dropped Python 2 support, or with what approx release? As (what I thought was) a temporary stopgap, I put in the date of your 1.2.0 release, listed as the first one of the community maintained plyara, reasoning that was when a version was officially released fully supporting Python 3. Is that correct? Also, in addition to my previous question, is 2020-01-01 fine as an end date for 2.x for now, or do you have something more specific in mind? Thanks. — You are receiving this because you were mentioned. Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub <#210 (comment)>, or mute the thread <https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AAVFVOYMMMX23YEWSCRETL3PTVTALANCNFSM4HKXOWQQ> .

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CAM-Gerlach commentedMay 4, 2019
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version 2.0.0 that we released on February 1 wasa rewrite of the project in python 3

Ah, that's what I was looking for; thanks@utkonos . I'll just nix thePython 2 and 3 support component entirely, then. Sorry for the confusion.

@CAM-GerlachCAM-Gerlach deleted the add-plyara branchMay 7, 2019 02:44
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Add plyara

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