Hello everybody,
quite some time passed since the last changes to redis-natives-py. To be honest, Python hasn't been a substantial part of my language stack for the last two yrs or so (and I believe that it will neither in the near future), that's why I didn't come up with new changes/additions/fixes to redis-natives-py by myself.
But the project network graph shows that there are several forks that diverged with several commits that seem to be worth being integrated back into the main repository. (Especially @kvesteri commited a bunch of changes.)
Redis and the equally named Python client module have changed over the time and are supposed to do so in the near future. In order to keep redis-natives-py up to date and thus also useful for other python devs, I had the idea to join forces. What do you think about becoming maintainers to the official redis-natives-py repository, so that you can work directly on the sources and have full control?
Another question is, whether you are still using redis-natives-py and if you still consider it being useful and worth enough maintining it. Does anybody have experience about how it works with Python3?
I'd be glad to hear from you.
Peter
Hello everybody,
quite some time passed since the last changes to redis-natives-py. To be honest, Python hasn't been a substantial part of my language stack for the last two yrs or so (and I believe that it will neither in the near future), that's why I didn't come up with new changes/additions/fixes to redis-natives-py by myself.
But the project network graph shows that there are several forks that diverged with several commits that seem to be worth being integrated back into the main repository. (Especially @kvesteri commited a bunch of changes.)
Redis and the equally named Python client module have changed over the time and are supposed to do so in the near future. In order to keep redis-natives-py up to date and thus also useful for other python devs, I had the idea to join forces. What do you think about becoming maintainers to the official redis-natives-py repository, so that you can work directly on the sources and have full control?
Another question is, whether you are still using redis-natives-py and if you still consider it being useful and worth enough maintining it. Does anybody have experience about how it works with Python3?
I'd be glad to hear from you.
Peter