I'm sorry for the noob question, but how much additional performance/functionality/flexibility could be gained by moving to Python 3?
Maybe my standards are too low since I am using Django as a vehicle to learn programming and web-development as a hobby right now, but as far as I can tell the Python/Django environment seems to work exceptionally well meeting, and even exceeding, its intended objective (The web framework for perfectionists with deadlines)
It seems a lot of people have this child-like concept of time where a few months is a "long time" and upgrading to the latest and/or greatest thing is so much of a priority that they are regarding it as a "fix". But as far as I can tell nothing is broken by having Django run on 2.x. If a bicycle works really, really well; is replacing the chain a top priority?
Maybe my standards are too low since I am using Django as a vehicle to learn programming and web-development as a hobby right now, but as far as I can tell the Python/Django environment seems to work exceptionally well meeting, and even exceeding, its intended objective (The web framework for perfectionists with deadlines)
It seems a lot of people have this child-like concept of time where a few months is a "long time" and upgrading to the latest and/or greatest thing is so much of a priority that they are regarding it as a "fix". But as far as I can tell nothing is broken by having Django run on 2.x. If a bicycle works really, really well; is replacing the chain a top priority?