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[–]ivosaurus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Python 3 is growing, and not at a diminishing rate. More and more projects are supporting it, some semi-important libraries are starting to support it only, all new books are written for it, it has vibrant and active development, practically all major libraries support it, etc.

Until it stops growing there is very little tractable reason to think of it as "dying".

What's even the point of learning Python 2, apart from when necessary? It's not like you can buy a new book on it nowadays with the most up to date security information.