> I need to develop against multiple Python versions, including 2.7, various Python 3 versions (3.5 and 3.6, mostly), and PyPy.
The article states that this is an "unusual" setup, but unfortunately it is all too common. The Python 2/3 split has created such a large and sad schism in the development community, has wasted countless developer hours, and has held back the language itself incalculably. A travesty.
> I need to develop against multiple Python versions, including 2.7, various Python 3 versions (3.5 and 3.6, mostly), and PyPy.
The article states that this is an "unusual" setup, but unfortunately it is all too common. The Python 2/3 split has created such a large and sad schism in the development community, has wasted countless developer hours, and has held back the language itself incalculably. A travesty.