Hi Reynaldo, answered in support case, but for reference:
Although the official support for python 2.X is set to 2020, DCC company applications (Autodesk, Foundry etc...) will slowly move over. During last year's Siggraph we've been discussing with them and through the https://www.vfxplatform.com it has been decided to start putting ahead a 3.6.X but is not been nailed yet, and therefore it'll likely take way longer to get fully adopted by the industry (I'm expecting a delay of at least 2 years.)
To be honest I would avoid moving to py3 before all the DCC apps have been doing it.
If you are interested though, you can find our (not ready to merge, therefore not supported officially yet) branch for py3k compatibility here: https://bitbucket.org/ftrack/ftrack-python-api/pull-requests/191
Unable to import ftrack on windows 10 x64 machine running Python 3.7 64 bit
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Hi Reynaldo, answered in support case, but for reference:
Although the official support for python 2.X is set to 2020, DCC company applications (Autodesk, Foundry etc...) will slowly move over. During last year's Siggraph we've been discussing with them and through the https://www.vfxplatform.com it has been decided to start putting ahead a 3.6.X but is not been nailed yet, and therefore it'll likely take way longer to get fully adopted by the industry (I'm expecting a delay of at least 2 years.)
To be honest I would avoid moving to py3 before all the DCC apps have been doing it.
If you are interested though, you can find our (not ready to merge, therefore not supported officially yet) branch for py3k compatibility here: https://bitbucket.org/ftrack/ftrack-python-api/pull-requests/191
Hope it helps.
L.