Python 3.10.0
Release Date: Oct. 4, 2021
This is the stable release of Python 3.10.0
Python 3.10.0 is the newest major release of the Python programming language, and it contains many new features and optimizations.
Major new features of the 3.10 series, compared to 3.9
Among the new major new features and changes so far:
- PEP 623 -- Deprecate and prepare for the removal of the wstr member in PyUnicodeObject.
- PEP 604 -- Allow writing union types as X | Y
- PEP 612 -- Parameter Specification Variables
- PEP 626 -- Precise line numbers for debugging and other tools.
- PEP 618 -- Add Optional Length-Checking To zip.
- bpo-12782: Parenthesized context managers are now officially allowed.
- PEP 632 -- Deprecate distutils module.
- PEP 613 -- Explicit Type Aliases
- PEP 634 -- Structural Pattern Matching: Specification
- PEP 635 -- Structural Pattern Matching: Motivation and Rationale
- PEP 636 -- Structural Pattern Matching: Tutorial
- PEP 644 -- Require OpenSSL 1.1.1 or newer
- PEP 624 -- Remove Py_UNICODE encoder APIs
- PEP 597 -- Add optional EncodingWarning
bpo-38605: from __future__ import annotations
(PEP 563) used to be on this list
in previous pre-releases but it has been postponed to Python 3.11 due to some compatibility concerns. You can read the Steering Council communication about it here to learn more.
bpo-44828: A change in the newly released macOS 12 Monterey caused file open and save windows in IDLE
and other tkinter
applications to be unusable. As of 2021-11-03, the macOS 64-bit universal2 installer file for this release was updated to include a fix in the third-party Tk
library for this problem. All other files are unchanged from the original 3.10.0 installer. If you have already installed 3.10.0 from here and encounter this problem on macOS 12 Monterey, download and run the updated installer linked below.
More resources
- Changelog
- Online Documentation
- PEP 619, 3.10 Release Schedule
- Report bugs at https://bugs.python.org.
- Help fund Python and its community.
And now for something completely different
For a Schwarzschild black hole (a black hole with no rotation or electromagnetic charge), given a free fall particle starting at the event
horizon, the maximum proper time (which happens when it falls without angular velocity) it will experience to fall into the singularity
is π*M
(in natural units), where M is the mass of the black hole. For Sagittarius A* (the
black hole at the centre of the milky way) this time is approximately 1 minute.
Schwarzschild black holes are also unique because they have a space-like singularity at their core, which means that the singularity doesn't happen at a specific point in space but happens at a specific point in time (the future). This means once you are inside the event horizon you cannot point with your finger towards the direction the singularity is located because the singularity happens in your future: no matter where you move, you will "fall" into it.
Files
Version | Operating System | Description | MD5 Sum | File Size | GPG |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gzipped source tarball | Source release | 729e36388ae9a832b01cf9138921b383 | 23.8 MB | SIG | |
XZ compressed source tarball | Source release | 3e7035d272680f80e3ce4e8eb492d580 | 17.9 MB | SIG | |
macOS 64-bit universal2 installer | macOS | for macOS 10.9 and later (updated for macOS 12 Monterey) | 8575cc983035ea2f0414e25ce0289ab8 | 37.9 MB | SIG |
Windows installer (64-bit) | Windows | Recommended | c3917c08a7fe85db7203da6dcaa99a70 | 27.0 MB | SIG |
Windows installer (32-bit) | Windows | 133aa48145032e341ad2a000cd3bff50 | 25.9 MB | SIG | |
Windows help file | Windows | 9d7b80c1c23cfb2cecd63ac4fac9766e | 9.1 MB | SIG | |
Windows embeddable package (64-bit) | Windows | 340408540eeff359d5eaf93139ab90fd | 8.1 MB | SIG | |
Windows embeddable package (32-bit) | Windows | dc9d1abc644dd78f5e48edae38c7bc6b | 7.2 MB | SIG |