##// END OF EJS Templates
Change version number to 0.12.rc1 to push the RC out.
Fernando Perez -
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@@ -1,140 +1,140 b''
1 1 # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
2 2 """Release data for the IPython project."""
3 3
4 4 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
5 5 # Copyright (c) 2008-2011, IPython Development Team.
6 6 # Copyright (c) 2001-2007, Fernando Perez <fernando.perez@colorado.edu>
7 7 # Copyright (c) 2001, Janko Hauser <jhauser@zscout.de>
8 8 # Copyright (c) 2001, Nathaniel Gray <n8gray@caltech.edu>
9 9 #
10 10 # Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
11 11 #
12 12 # The full license is in the file COPYING.txt, distributed with this software.
13 13 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
14 14
15 15 # Name of the package for release purposes. This is the name which labels
16 16 # the tarballs and RPMs made by distutils, so it's best to lowercase it.
17 17 name = 'ipython'
18 18
19 19 # IPython version information. An empty _version_extra corresponds to a full
20 20 # release. 'dev' as a _version_extra string means this is a development
21 21 # version
22 22 _version_major = 0
23 23 _version_minor = 12
24 24 _version_micro = '' # use '' for first of series, number for 1 and above
25 _version_extra = 'beta'
25 _version_extra = 'rc1'
26 26 #_version_extra = '' # Uncomment this for full releases
27 27
28 28 # Construct full version string from these.
29 29 _ver = [_version_major, _version_minor]
30 30 if _version_micro:
31 31 _ver.append(_version_micro)
32 32 if _version_extra:
33 33 _ver.append(_version_extra)
34 34
35 35 __version__ = '.'.join(map(str, _ver))
36 36
37 37 version = __version__ # backwards compatibility name
38 38
39 39 description = "IPython: Productive Interactive Computing"
40 40
41 41 long_description = \
42 42 """
43 43 IPython provides a rich toolkit to help you make the most out of using Python
44 44 interactively. Its main components are:
45 45
46 46 * Powerful interactive Python shells (terminal- and Qt-based).
47 47 * Support for interactive data visualization and use of GUI toolkits.
48 48 * Flexible, embeddable interpreters to load into your own projects.
49 49 * Tools for high level and interactive parallel computing.
50 50
51 51 The enhanced interactive Python shells have the following main features:
52 52
53 53 * Comprehensive object introspection.
54 54
55 55 * Input history, persistent across sessions.
56 56
57 57 * Caching of output results during a session with automatically generated
58 58 references.
59 59
60 60 * Readline based name completion.
61 61
62 62 * Extensible system of 'magic' commands for controlling the environment and
63 63 performing many tasks related either to IPython or the operating system.
64 64
65 65 * Configuration system with easy switching between different setups (simpler
66 66 than changing $PYTHONSTARTUP environment variables every time).
67 67
68 68 * Session logging and reloading.
69 69
70 70 * Extensible syntax processing for special purpose situations.
71 71
72 72 * Access to the system shell with user-extensible alias system.
73 73
74 74 * Easily embeddable in other Python programs and wxPython GUIs.
75 75
76 76 * Integrated access to the pdb debugger and the Python profiler.
77 77
78 78 The parallel computing architecture has the following main features:
79 79
80 80 * Quickly parallelize Python code from an interactive Python/IPython session.
81 81
82 82 * A flexible and dynamic process model that be deployed on anything from
83 83 multicore workstations to supercomputers.
84 84
85 85 * An architecture that supports many different styles of parallelism, from
86 86 message passing to task farming.
87 87
88 88 * Both blocking and fully asynchronous interfaces.
89 89
90 90 * High level APIs that enable many things to be parallelized in a few lines
91 91 of code.
92 92
93 93 * Share live parallel jobs with other users securely.
94 94
95 95 * Dynamically load balanced task farming system.
96 96
97 97 * Robust error handling in parallel code.
98 98
99 99 The latest development version is always available from IPython's `GitHub
100 100 site <http://github.com/ipython>`_.
101 101 """
102 102
103 103 license = 'BSD'
104 104
105 105 authors = {'Fernando' : ('Fernando Perez','fperez.net@gmail.com'),
106 106 'Janko' : ('Janko Hauser','jhauser@zscout.de'),
107 107 'Nathan' : ('Nathaniel Gray','n8gray@caltech.edu'),
108 108 'Ville' : ('Ville Vainio','vivainio@gmail.com'),
109 109 'Brian' : ('Brian E Granger', 'ellisonbg@gmail.com'),
110 110 'Min' : ('Min Ragan-Kelley', 'benjaminrk@gmail.com')
111 111 }
112 112
113 113 author = 'The IPython Development Team'
114 114
115 115 author_email = 'ipython-dev@scipy.org'
116 116
117 117 url = 'http://ipython.org'
118 118
119 119 # This will only be valid for actual releases sent to PyPI, but that's OK since
120 120 # those are the ones we want pip/easy_install to be able to find.
121 121 download_url = 'http://archive.ipython.org/release/%s' % version
122 122
123 123 platforms = ['Linux','Mac OSX','Windows XP/2000/NT']
124 124
125 125 keywords = ['Interactive','Interpreter','Shell','Parallel','Distributed']
126 126
127 127 classifiers = [
128 128 'Intended Audience :: Developers',
129 129 'Intended Audience :: Science/Research'
130 130 'License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License',
131 131 'Programming Language :: Python',
132 132 'Programming Language :: Python :: 2',
133 133 'Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6',
134 134 'Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7',
135 135 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3',
136 136 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.1',
137 137 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.2',
138 138 'Topic :: System :: Distributed Computing',
139 139 'Topic :: System :: Shells'
140 140 ]
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