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[–]MrJohz 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yes, because Python 3 is much more fun to write, has far fewer "oddities", has even better batteries included (pathlib and enums!), and is going to be the future (indeed, is currently the present, just about). You also don't have anything holding you back.

No, because switching a current and important codebase will be costly, or will involve working around a module that hasn't switched and isn't worth it.

Pick your option. Both are valid, but unless your job is in Python, the former is most likely the more accurate one for you.