The difference between Python 2 and Python 3 is significant enough to warrant their own tags, but the changes made in minor versions are not.
This sentence is plainly incorrect, especially in the context of Python 2. Even if we ignore any library changes and only look at new syntax between 2.5 and 2.7, there's generator expressions, the with
statement, the ternary operator, unified try
blocks (you could not use finally
together with except
before 2.5!), set literals, and much more. I would say for most questions the difference between 2.4 and 2.7 is bigger than 2.7 to 3.x.
I concede that the specific version doesn't matter for a lot of trivial questions. However, in these cases the python2/3 tags do not matter either - you can answer many basic questions with version-ambiguous code that runs on 2 and 3. However, the tags do matter for more complex questions which might benefit from advanced language features, or if OP is stuck with an old version where certain basic features (e.g. dict comprehensions) cannot be used.
For reference, I once had to edit my answer to a python question 3 times because it turned out OP was using the bundled jython 2.1 on IBM WebSphere. I'm not sure how long ago that was but IIRC jython 2.7 was already a thing. In that specific case, OP was unaware that it was a really old version, but a 2.1 tag on that question would have been tremendously helpful.
TLDR, the tags are useful if used correctly, so I don't like your suggestion of synonymising them to the 2/3.x tags. Optimally, all questions should have the generic python
tag and add a version specific tag only if required. That's obviously not what happened, but removing the ability to disambiguate the versions is IMO not a good way to solve this.
This answer is way more contentious than assumed - potentially because it's mainly a rebuke of an argument for consolidation and offers no alternative ideas. Here's my personal take on how it could be cleaned up if a cleanup should be deemed necessary:
- Synonymize 2.7 to 2.x. That should be the default assumption for python 2 in most cases, and removes 95% of the tag volume for python2.
- Leave the other 2.x tags alone because they are useful to disambiguate older versions. If someone wants to ask a new question about 2.5, tagging as 2.5 is extremely helpful for answerers.
- I don't really care what you do with the 3.n tags. There's a few new syntax constructs (e.g. the 3.10 match/case statements) but these are IMO less impactful for most questions than the changes in the 2.n updates. Furthermore many of those features are new enough that most people would still prefix an answer with a disclaimer it only works in version x and up (e.g. 3.10 for case).
[python*]
and get all tags that start with "python". (Which, incidentally, does highlight that, for the version-specific tags that are kept, there is a significant importance in ensuring that they follow a standard pattern. The Python tags already do, luckily. Surely not by accident.)[python-3*]
.The version of the Python programming language released on September 13, 2015. For issues that are specific to Python 3.5. Use the more generic [python] and [python-3.x] tags where possible.
... So one option would be to re-word that to always say to include[python]
...