1. People with existing or new Python 3 codebases who wish to provide ongoing Python 2.7 support easily and with little maintenance burden.
2. People who wish to ease and accelerate migration of their Python 2 codebases to Python 3.3+, module by module, without giving up Python 2 compatibility.
"Python 2 is the next COBOL."
-- Alex Gaynor, at PyCon AU 2013
Python 2.7 is the end of the Python 2 line. (See PEP 404.) The language and standard libraries are improving only in Python 3.x.
Python 3.x is a better language and better set of standard libraries than Python 2.x in many ways. Python 3.x is cleaner, less warty, and easier to learn than Python 2. It has better memory efficiency, easier Unicode handling, and powerful new features like the asyncio module.
Here are some quotes:
- "Django's developers have found that attempting to write Python 3 code that's compatible with Python 2 is much more rewarding than the opposite." from the Django docs.
- "Thanks to Python 3 being more strict about things than Python 2 (e.g., bytes vs. strings), the source translation [from Python 3 to 2] can be easier and more straightforward than from Python 2 to 3. Plus it gives you more direct experience developing in Python 3 which, since it is the future of Python, is a good thing long-term." from the official guide "Porting Python 2 Code to Python 3" by Brett Cannon.
- "Developer energy should be reserved for addressing real technical difficulties associated with the Python 3 transition (like distinguishing their 8-bit text strings from their binary data). They shouldn't be punished with additional code changes ..." from PEP 414 by Armin Ronacher and Nick Coghlan.
Yes, but using python-future
will probably be easier and lead to cleaner code with fewer bugs.
Consider this quote:
"Duplication of effort is wasteful, and replacing the various home-grown approaches with a standard feature usually ends up making things more readable, and interoperable as well."
-- Guido van Rossum (blog post)
future
also includes various Py2/3 compatibility tools in future.utils
picked from large projects (including IPython, Django, Jinja2, Pandas), which should reduce the burden on every project to roll its own py3k compatibility wrapper module.
In our Python training courses, we at Python Charmers faced a dilemma: teach people Python 3, which was future-proof but not as useful to them today because of weaker 3rd-party package support, or teach people Python 2, which was more useful today but would require them to change their code and unlearn various habits soon. We searched for ways to avoid polluting the world with more deprecated code, but didn't find a good way.
Also, in attempting to help with porting packages such as scikit-learn to Python 3, I (Ed) was dissatisfied with how much code cruft was necessary to introduce to support Python 2 and 3 from a single codebase (the preferred porting option). Since backward-compatibility with Python 2 may be necessary for at least the next 5 years, one of the promised benefits of Python 3 -- cleaner code with fewer of Python 2's warts -- was difficult to realize before in practice in a single codebase that supported both platforms.
The goal is to accelerate the uptake of Python 3 and help the strong Python community to remain united around a single version of the language.
future
is used by several major projects, including mezzanine and ObsPy. It is also currently being used to help with porting 800,000 lines of Python 2 code in Sage to Python 2/3.
Currently python-future
has over 1000 unit tests. Many of these are straight from the Python 3.3 and 3.4 test suites.
In general, the future
package itself is in good shape, whereas the futurize
script for automatic porting is imperfect; chances are it will require some manual cleanup afterwards. The past
package also needs to be expanded.
Not yet; future
is still in beta. Where possible, we will try not to break anything which was documented and used to work. After version 1.0 is released, the API will not change in backward-incompatible ways until a hypothetical version 2.0.
2to3
is a powerful and flexible tool that can produce different styles of Python 3 code. It is, however, primarily designed for one-way porting efforts, for projects that can leave behind Python 2 support.
The example at the top of the 2to3 docs demonstrates this. After transformation by 2to3
, example.py
looks like this:
def greet(name):
print("Hello, {0}!".format(name))
print("What's your name?")
name = input()
greet(name)
This is Python 3 code that, although syntactically valid on Python 2, is semantically incorrect. On Python 2, it raises an exception for most inputs; worse, it allows arbitrary code execution by the user for specially crafted inputs because of the eval()
executed by Python 2's input()
function.
This is not an isolated example; almost every output of 2to3
will need modification to provide backward compatibility with Python 2. As an alternative, the python-future
project provides a script called futurize
that is based on lib2to3
but will produce code that is compatible with both platforms (Py2 and Py3).
Can I maintain a Python 2 codebase and use 2to3 to automatically convert to Python 3 in the setup script?
This was originally the approach recommended by Python's core developers, but it has some large drawbacks:
1. First, your actual working codebase will be stuck with Python 2's warts and smaller feature set for as long as you need to retain Python 2 compatibility. This may be at least 5 years for many projects, possibly much longer.
2. Second, this approach carries the significant disadvantage that you cannot apply patches submitted by Python 3 users against the auto-generated Python 3 code. (See this talk by Jacob Kaplan-Moss.)
python-future
is a higher-level compatibility layer than six
that includes more backported functionality from Python 3, more forward-ported functionality from Python 2, and supports cleaner code, but requires more modern Python versions to run.
python-future
and six
share the same goal of making it possible to write a single-source codebase that works on both Python 2 and Python 3. python-future
has the further goal of allowing standard Py3 code to run with almost no modification on both Py3 and Py2. future
provides a more complete set of support for Python 3's features, including backports of Python 3 builtins such as the bytes
object (which is very different to Python 2's str
object) and several standard library modules.
python-future
supports only Python 2.7+ and Python 3.4+, whereas six
supports all versions of Python from 2.4 onwards. (See supported-versions
.) If you must support older Python versions, six
will be essential for you. However, beware that maintaining single-source compatibility with older Python versions is ugly and not fun.
If you can drop support for older Python versions, python-future
leverages some important features introduced into Python 2.7, such as import hooks, and a comprehensive and well-tested set of backported functionality, to allow you to write more idiomatic, maintainable code with fewer compatibility hacks.
python-future
contains, in addition to the future
compatibility package, a futurize
script that is similar to python-modernize.py
in intent and design. Both are based heavily on 2to3
.
Whereas python-modernize
converts Py2 code into a common subset of Python 2 and 3, with six
as a run-time dependency, futurize
converts either Py2 or Py3 code into (almost) standard Python 3 code, with future
as a run-time dependency.
Because future
provides more backported Py3 behaviours from six
, the code resulting from futurize
is more likely to work identically on both Py3 and Py2 with less additional manual porting effort.
Python 2.7, and 3.4+ only.
Python 2.7 introduced many important forward-compatibility features (such as import hooks, b'...'
literals and __future__
definitions) that greatly reduce the maintenance burden for single-source Py2/3 compatible code. future
leverages these features and aims to close the remaining gap between Python 3 and 2.7.
Yes, except for the standard library import hooks (currently). Feedback and pull requests are welcome!
Not sure. This would be nice...
There was (python-porting), but it's now dead.
Yes please :) We welcome bug reports, additional tests, pull requests, and stories of either success or failure with using it. Help with the fixers for the futurize
script is particularly welcome.