The docstring read: "Experimental: returns a context manager that allows reverting state to previous checkpoint. Use only for deterministic replay."
The humid Mumbai air buzzed with anticipation. Thousands of Python developers packed the convention center, their laptop stickers glowing under neon lights—"3.14," "No GIL," "Faster Futures."
She typed:
From: guido@python.org Subject: "One more gift"
Within 24 hours, three separate security advisories warned: "Do not use time.travel() in production. Seriously. We mean it."
But the writing was on the wall. The future was parallel. On Christmas morning, a mysterious pull request appeared on CPython’s GitHub.
async with anext(generator): # Wait, what? ... No. That wasn’t it.
The docstring read: "Experimental: returns a context manager that allows reverting state to previous checkpoint. Use only for deterministic replay."
The humid Mumbai air buzzed with anticipation. Thousands of Python developers packed the convention center, their laptop stickers glowing under neon lights—"3.14," "No GIL," "Faster Futures."
She typed:
From: guido@python.org Subject: "One more gift"
Within 24 hours, three separate security advisories warned: "Do not use time.travel() in production. Seriously. We mean it."
But the writing was on the wall. The future was parallel. On Christmas morning, a mysterious pull request appeared on CPython’s GitHub.
async with anext(generator): # Wait, what? ... No. That wasn’t it.