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PEP: 1
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2000-07-25 13:59:08 -04:00
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Title: PEP Purpose and Guidelines
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Version: $Revision$
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2000-10-30 16:16:38 -05:00
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Author: barry@digicool.com (Barry A. Warsaw),
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jeremy@digicool.com (Jeremy Hylton)
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Status: Active
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Type: Informational
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Created: 13-Jun-2000
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Post-History: 21-Mar-2001
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What is a PEP?
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PEP stands for Python Enhancement Proposal. A PEP is a design
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document providing information to the Python community, or
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describing a new feature for Python. The PEP should provide a
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concise technical specification of the feature and a rationale for
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the feature.
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We intend PEPs to be the primary mechanisms for proposing new
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features, for collecting community input on an issue, and for
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documenting the design decisions that have gone into Python. The
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PEP author is responsible for building consensus within the
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community and documenting dissenting opinions.
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Because the PEPs are maintained as plain text files under CVS
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control, their revision history is the historical record of the
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feature proposal[1].
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Kinds of PEPs
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2000-08-23 01:04:42 -04:00
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There are two kinds of PEPs. A standards track PEP describes a
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new feature or implementation for Python. An informational PEP
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describes a Python design issue, or provides general guidelines or
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information to the Python community, but does not propose a new
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feature.
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PEP Work Flow
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The PEP editor, Barry Warsaw <barry@digicool.com>, assigns numbers
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for each PEP and changes its status.
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The PEP process begins with a new idea for Python. Each PEP must
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have a champion -- someone who writes the PEP using the style and
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format described below, shepherds the discussions in the
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appropriate forums, and attempts to build community consensus
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around the idea. The PEP champion (a.k.a. Author) should first
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attempt to ascertain whether the idea is PEP-able. Small
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enhancements or patches often don't need a PEP and can be injected
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into the Python development work flow with a patch submission to
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the SourceForge patch manager[2] or feature request tracker[3].
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The PEP champion then emails the PEP editor with a proposed title
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and a rough, but fleshed out, draft of the PEP. This draft must
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be written in PEP style as described below.
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If the PEP editor approves, he will assign the PEP a number, label
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it as standards track or informational, give it status 'draft',
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and create and check-in the initial draft of the PEP. The PEP
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editor will not unreasonably deny a PEP. Reasons for denying PEP
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status include duplication of effort, being technically unsound,
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or not in keeping with the Python philosophy. The BDFL
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(Benevolent Dictator for Life, Guido van Rossum
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<guido@python.org>) can be consulted during the approval phase,
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and is the final arbitrator of the draft's PEP-ability.
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The author of the PEP is then responsible for posting the PEP to
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the community forums, and marshaling community support for it. As
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updates are necessary, the PEP author can check in new versions if
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they have CVS commit permissions, or can email new PEP versions to
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the PEP editor for committing.
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Standards track PEPs consists of two parts, a design document and
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a reference implementation. The PEP should be reviewed and
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accepted before a reference implementation is begun, unless a
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reference implementation will aid people in studying the PEP.
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Standards Track PEPs must include an implementation - in the form
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of code, patch, or URL to same - before it can be considered
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Final.
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PEP authors are responsible for collecting community feedback on a
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PEP before submitting it for review. A PEP that has not been
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discussed on python-list@python.org and/or python-dev@python.org
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will not be accepted. However, wherever possible, long open-ended
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discussions on public mailing lists should be avoided. A better
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strategy is to encourage public feedback directly to the PEP
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author, who collects and integrates the comments back into the
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PEP.
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Once the authors have completed a PEP, they must inform the PEP
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editor that it is ready for review. PEPs are reviewed by the BDFL
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and his chosen consultants, who may accept or reject a PEP or send
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it back to the author(s) for revision.
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Once a PEP has been accepted, the reference implementation must be
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completed. When the reference implementation is complete and
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accepted by the BDFL, the status will be changed to `Final.'
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A PEP can also be assigned status `Deferred.' The PEP author or
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editor can assign the PEP this status when no progress is being
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made on the PEP. Once a PEP is deferred, the PEP editor can
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re-assign it to draft status.
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A PEP can also be `Rejected'. Perhaps after all is said and done
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it was not a good idea. It is still important to have a record of
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this fact.
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PEPs can also be replaced by a different PEP, rendering the
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original obsolete. This is intended for Informational PEPs, where
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version 2 of an API can replace version 1.
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PEP work flow is as follows:
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Draft -> Accepted -> Final -> Replaced
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^
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+----> Rejected
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v
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Deferred
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Some informational PEPs may also have a status of `Active' if they
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are never meant to be completed. E.g. PEP 1.
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What belongs in a successful PEP?
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Each PEP should have the following parts:
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1. Preamble -- RFC822 style headers containing meta-data about the
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PEP, including the PEP number, a short descriptive title
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(limited to a maximum of 38 characters), the names contact info
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for each author, etc.
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2. Abstract -- a short (~200 word) description of the technical
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issue being addressed.
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3. Copyright/public domain -- Each PEP must either be explicitly
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labelled in the public domain or the Open Publication
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License[4].
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4. Specification -- The technical specification should describe
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the syntax and semantics of any new language feature. The
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specification should be detailed enough to allow competing,
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interoperable implementations for any of the current Python
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platforms (CPython, JPython, Python .NET).
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5. Rationale -- The rationale fleshes out the specification by
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describing what motivated the design and why particular design
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decisions were made. It should describe alternate designs that
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were considered and related work, e.g. how the feature is
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supported in other languages.
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The rationale should provide evidence of consensus within the
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community and discuss important objections or concerns raised
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during discussion.
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6. Reference Implementation -- The reference implementation must
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be completed before any PEP is given status 'Final,' but it
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need not be completed before the PEP is accepted. It is better
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to finish the specification and rationale first and reach
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consensus on it before writing code.
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The final implementation must include test code and
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documentation appropriate for either the Python language
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reference or the standard library reference.
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PEP Style
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PEPs are written in plain ASCII text, and should adhere to a
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rigid style. There is a Python script that parses this style and
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converts the plain text PEP to HTML for viewing on the web[5].
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Each PEP must begin with an RFC822 style header preamble. The
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headers must appear in the following order. Headers marked with
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`*' are optional and are described below. All other headers are
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required.
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PEP: <pep number>
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Title: <pep title>
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Version: <cvs version string>
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Author: <list of authors' email and real name>
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* Discussions-To: <email address>
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Status: <Draft | Active | Accepted | Deferred | Final | Replaced>
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Type: <Informational | Standards Track>
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Created: <date created on, in dd-mmm-yyyy format>
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* Python-Version: <version number>
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Post-History: <dates of postings to python-list and python-dev>
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* Replaces: <pep number>
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* Replaced-By: <pep number>
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Standards track PEPs must have a Python-Version: header which
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indicates the version of Python that the feature will be released
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with. Informational PEPs do not need a Python-Version: header.
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While a PEP is in private discussions (usually during the initial
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Draft phase), a Discussions-To: header will indicate the mailing
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list or URL where the PEP is being discussed. No Discussions-To:
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header is necessary if the PEP is being discussed privately with
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the author, or on the python-list or python-dev email mailing
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lists.
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PEPs may also have a Replaced-By: header indicating that a PEP has
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been rendered obsolete by a later document; the value is the
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number of the PEP that replaces the current document. The newer
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PEP must have a Replaces: header containing the number of the PEP
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that it rendered obsolete.
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PEP headings must begin in column zero and the initial letter of
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each word must be capitalized as in book titles. Acronyms should
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be in all capitals. The body of each section must be indented 4
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spaces. Code samples inside body sections should be indented a
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further 4 spaces, and other indentation can be used as required to
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make the text readable. You must use two blank lines between the
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last line of a section's body and the next section heading.
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Tab characters must never appear in the document at all. A PEP
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should include the Emacs stanza included by example in this PEP.
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A PEP must contain a Copyright section, and it is strongly
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recommended to put the PEP in the public domain.
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You should footnote any URLs in the body of the PEP, and a PEP
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should include a References section with those URLs expanded.
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2000-08-15 01:54:18 -04:00
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References and Footnotes
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[1] This historical record is available by the normal CVS commands
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for retrieving older revisions. For those without direct access
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to the CVS tree, you can browse the current and past PEP revisions
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via the SourceForge web site at
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http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/python/nondist/peps/?cvsroot=python
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[2] http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=5470&atid=305470
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[3] http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?atid=355470&group_id=5470&func=browse
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[4] http://www.opencontent.org/openpub/
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[5] The script referred to here is pep2html.py, which lives in
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the same directory in the CVS tree as the PEPs themselves. Try
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"pep2html.py --help" for details.
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2000-08-17 01:01:20 -04:00
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The URL for viewing PEPs on the web is
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http://python.sourceforge.net/peps/
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Copyright
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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End:
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