python-peps/pep-0641.rst

183 lines
6.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
Raw Blame History

This file contains invisible Unicode characters

This file contains invisible Unicode characters that are indistinguishable to humans but may be processed differently by a computer. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

PEP: 641
Title: Using an underscore in the version portion of Python 3.10 compatibility tags
Author: Brett Cannon <brett@python.org>,
Steve Dower <steve.dower@python.org>,
Barry Warsaw <barry@python.org>
PEP-Delegate: Pablo Galindo <pablogsal@python.org>
Discussions-To: https://discuss.python.org/t/pep-641-using-an-underscore-in-the-version-portion-of-python-3-10-compatibility-tags/5513
Status: Rejected
Type: Standards Track
Content-Type: text/x-rst
Created: 2020-10-20
Python-Version: 3.10
Post-History: 2020-10-21
Resolution: https://discuss.python.org/t/pep-641-using-an-underscore-in-the-version-portion-of-python-3-10-compatibility-tags/5513/42
Abstract
========
.. note::
This PEP was rejected due to potential breakage in the community.
Using the tag system outlined in :pep:`425` (primarily used for wheel
file names), each release of Python specifies compatibility tags
(e.g. ``cp39``, ``py39`` for CPython 3.9). For CPython 3.10, this PEP
proposes using ``3_10`` as the version portion of the tags
(instead of ``310``).
Motivation
==========
Up to this point, the version portion of compatibility tags used in
e.g. wheel file names has been a straight concatenation of the major
and minor versions of Python, both for the CPython interpreter tag and
the generic, interpreter-agnostic interpreter tag (e.g. ``cp39`` and
``py39``, respectively). This also applies to the ABI tag
(e.g. ``cp39``). Thanks to both the major and minor versions being
single digits, it has been unambiguous what which digit in e.g. ``39``
represented.
But starting with Python 3.10, ambiguity comes up as ``310`` does not
clearly delineate whether the Python version is ``3.10``, ``31.0``, or
``310`` as the major-only version of Python. Thus using ``3_10`` to
separate major/minor portions as allowed by :pep:`425` disambiguates
the Python version being supported.
Rationale
=========
Using ``3_10`` instead of another proposed separator is a restriction
of :pep:`425`, thus the only options are ``3_10`` or ``310``.
Specification
=============
The ``SOABI`` configure variable and
``sysconfig.get_config_var('py_version_nodot')`` will be updated to
use ``3_10`` appropriately.
Backwards Compatibility
=======================
Tools relying on the 'packaging' project [2]_ already expect a
version specification of ``3_10`` for Python 3.10. Keeping the version
specifier as ``310`` would require backing that change out and
updating dependent projects (e.g. pip).
Switching to ``3_10`` will impact any tools that implicitly rely on
the convention that the minor version is a single digit. However,
these are broken regardless of any change here.
For tools assuming the major version is only the first digit, they
will require updating if we switch to ``3_10``.
In non-locale ASCII, ``_`` sorts after any digit, so lexicographic
sorting matching a sort by Python version of a wheel file name will be
kept.
Since PEP 515 (Python 3.6), underscores in numeric literals are ignored.
This means that ``int("3_10")`` and ``int("310")`` produce the same result,
and ordering based on conversion to an integer will be preserved.
**However**, this is still a bad way to sort tags, and the point is raised
here simply to show that this proposal does not make things worse.
Security Implications
=====================
There are no known security concerns.
How to Teach This
=================
As use of the interpreter tag is mostly machine-based and this PEP
disambiguates, there should not be any special teaching consideration
required.
Reference Implementation
========================
A pull request [1]_ already exists adding support to CPython 3.10.
Support for reading wheel files with this proposed PEP is already
implemented.
Rejected Ideas
==============
Not making the change
---------------------
It was considered to not change the tag and stay with ``310``. The
argument was it's less work and it won't break any existing
tooling. But in the end it was thought that the disambiguation is
better to have.
Open Issues
===========
How far should we take this?
----------------------------
Other places where the major and minor version are used could be
updated to use an underscore as well (e.g. ``.pyc`` files, the import
path to the zip file for the stdlib). It is not known how useful it
would be to make this pervasive.
Standardizing on double digit minor version numbers
---------------------------------------------------
An alternative suggestion has been made to disambiguate where the
major and minor versions start/stop by forcing the minor version to
always be two digits, padding with a ``0`` as required. The advantages
of this is it makes the current ``cp310`` interpreter tag accurate,
thus minimizing breakage. It also does differentiate going forward.
There are a couple of drawbacks, though. One is the disambiguation
only exists *if* you know that the minor version number is two digits;
compare that to ``cp3_10`` which is unambiguous regardless of your
base knowledge. The potential for a three digit minor version number
is also not addressed by this two digit requirement.
There is also the issue of other interpreters not following the
practice in the past, present, or future. For instance, it is
unknown if other people have used a three digit version portion of the
interpreter tag previously for another interpreter where this rule
would be incorrect. This change would also suggest that interpreters which
currently have a single digit minor version -- e.g. PyPy 7.3 -- to
change from ``pp73`` to ``pp703`` or make the switch from their next
minor release onward (e.g. 7.4 or 8.0). Otherwise this would make this
rule exclusive to the ``cp`` interpreter type which would make it more
confusing for people.
References
==========
.. [1] Reference implementation
(https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/20333)
.. [2] The 'packaging' project
(https://pypi.org/project/packaging/)
Copyright
=========
This document is placed in the public domain or under the
CC0-1.0-Universal license, whichever is more permissive.
..
Local Variables:
mode: indented-text
indent-tabs-mode: nil
sentence-end-double-space: t
fill-column: 70
coding: utf-8
End: