>My take is that many sources, including the ones linked to in the tweet's replies point to solid growth in Python 3 adoption. Python3 might not have overtaken Python 2 overall, but it's very far from being "dead".
I wasn't making the point that Python 2 is dead, in fact quite the opposite. I'm saying that with this many users the adoption rate is too slow. There is no real reason for people to switch. Until there is that incentive Python 2 will not die.
I wasn't making the point that Python 2 is dead, in fact quite the opposite. I'm saying that with this many users the adoption rate is too slow. There is no real reason for people to switch. Until there is that incentive Python 2 will not die.