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](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1767513/read-first-n-lines-of-a-file-in-python): ```py 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 [tag: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 A related meta-topic are questions of this sort, *[How to deal with hugely upvoted, bad and outdated answers?](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/272570/how-to-deal-with-hugely-upvoted-bad-and-outdated-answers)*.