This seems only useful insofar as it shows the py3 progress, over the last few years, of the top 200 libraries on pypi.
It makes me wonder – if it took this long for the most popular libraries (those likely to have the most contributors/users/etc), how long will it take for the others (top500, top1k)?
Some will never migrate, probably indicating the project is no longer maintained. That said, I bet there will be Python2.7 running for many years after the EOL. I also wouldn’t be surprised if someone stepped up to apply security patches after 2020.
This seems only useful insofar as it shows the py3 progress, over the last few years, of the top 200 libraries on pypi.
It makes me wonder – if it took this long for the most popular libraries (those likely to have the most contributors/users/etc), how long will it take for the others (top500, top1k)?
Some will never migrate, probably indicating the project is no longer maintained. That said, I bet there will be Python2.7 running for many years after the EOL. I also wouldn’t be surprised if someone stepped up to apply security patches after 2020.