Python 3.14.0a2
Release Date: Nov. 19, 2024
This is an early developer preview of Python 3.14
Major new features of the 3.14 series, compared to 3.13
Python 3.14 is still in development. This release, 3.14.0a2 is the second of seven planned alpha releases.
Alpha releases are intended to make it easier to test the current state of new features and bug fixes and to test the release process.
During the alpha phase, features may be added up until the start of the beta phase (2025-05-06) and, if necessary, may be modified or deleted up until the release candidate phase (2025-07-22). Please keep in mind that this is a preview release and its use is not recommended for production environments.
Many new features for Python 3.14 are still being planned and written. Among the new major new features and changes so far:
- PEP 649: deferred evaluation of annotations
- PEP 741: Python configuration C API
- PEP 761 – Python 3.14 and onwards no longer provides PGP signatures for release artifacts. Instead, Sigstore is recommended for verifiers.
- Improved error messages
- (Hey, fellow core developer, if a feature you find important is missing from this list, let Hugo know.)
The next pre-release of Python 3.14 will be 3.14.0a3, currently scheduled for 2024-12-17.
More resources
- Online documentation
- PEP 745, 3.14 Release Schedule
- Report bugs at https://github.com/python/cpython/issues
- Help fund Python and its community
And now for something completely different
Ludolph van Ceulen (1540-1610) was a fencing and mathematics teacher in Leiden, Netherlands, and spent around 25 years calculating π (or pi), using essentially the same methods Archimedes employed some seventeen hundred years earlier.
Archimedes estimated π by calculating the circumferences of polygons that fit just inside and outside of a circle, reasoning the circumference of the circle lies between these two values. Archimedes went up to polygons with 96 sides, for a value between 3.1408 and 3.1428, which is accurate to two decimal places.
Van Ceulen used a polygon with half a billion sides. He published a 20-decimal value in his 1596 book Vanden Circkel ("On the Circle"), and later expanded it to 35 decimals:
3.14159265358979323846264338327950288
Van Ceulen's 20 digits is more than enough precision for any conceivable practical purpose. For example, even if a printed circle was perfect down to the atomic scale, the thermal vibrations of the molecules of ink would make most of those digits physically meaningless. NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory's highest accuracy calculations, for interplanetary navigation, uses 15 decimals: 3.141592653589793.
At Van Ceulen's request, his upper and lower bounds for π were engraved on his tombstone in Leiden. The tombstone was eventually lost but restored in 2000. In the Netherlands and Germany, π is sometimes referred to as the "Ludolphine number", after Van Ceulen.
Files
Version | Operating System | Description | MD5 Sum | File Size | Sigstore | SBOM | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gzipped source tarball | Source release | 3a57cdc52ec15f7c74662d7c7b666170 | 28.1 MB | .sigstore | SPDX | ||
XZ compressed source tarball | Source release | e797eab193f656006be0e51247d65e43 | 21.6 MB | .sigstore | SPDX | ||
macOS 64-bit universal2 installer | macOS | for macOS 10.13 and later | 787cafa9f0615f2b662a99a274c6b351 | 68.0 MB | .sigstore | ||
Windows installer (64-bit) | Windows | Recommended | a7f493a7486a461ddb859ea1c773e7c5 | 27.6 MB | .sigstore | SPDX | |
Windows installer (32-bit) | Windows | 5e6bf4d59a823889399db278066a0cbf | 26.3 MB | .sigstore | SPDX | ||
Windows installer (ARM64) | Windows | Experimental | 9dc1fa3106ea0ccac68320d2b968a22a | 26.9 MB | .sigstore | SPDX | |
Windows embeddable package (64-bit) | Windows | 2df98f5d6bf50bac26224e7bcb610b5b | 10.4 MB | .sigstore | SPDX | ||
Windows embeddable package (32-bit) | Windows | 15a3a896a0500d595bb414d9b6ce5e38 | 9.3 MB | .sigstore | SPDX | ||
Windows embeddable package (ARM64) | Windows | 2326cc9c8e21a0b706db15d2c3f7bd8b | 9.7 MB | .sigstore | SPDX |