When is it permissible to update other people's answers for Python 3?
It's a slippery slope. But it would be such a minor change. Look at this little gem:
with open("datafile") as myfile:
head = [next(myfile) for x in xrange(N)]
print head
Of course, xrange()
is now just range()
, and print
is now print()
.
At some point in the (near) future, examples like this will no longer be relevant since new users will most likely start with Python 3 or later.
What's the plan?
I imagine an organic change will happen regardless: OPs editing their examples, adding the python-3.x tag. And then maybe users updating other people's simple snippets like this gem.
Of course, the obvious problem is the breakdown of comment relatedness. The above example is a good one, because its comments refer to both Python2 and Python3, and these comments would be irrational if the code was updated.
A related meta-topic are questions of this sort, How to deal with hugely upvoted, bad and outdated answers?.
n
from a text file will not change--much. And what ends up happening is new users have to learn how Python2.x has changed in Python3.x even before they learn Python3. That's awkward. Can I suggest there is a type-theory we need to consider; types of questions that rise to some meta-level of relatedness, and others more basic. No?