Table of Contents
	  Executables written for interpretation by Python must use an
	  appropraite interpreter directive, or “shebang”, as the first line
	  of the program. This line should be of the
	  form #!.
	  See Section 2.4.1, “Interpreter Name” for the interpreter name to use.
	interpreter_location
	  As noted in Section 2.4.2, “Interpreter Location”, the
	  form #!/usr/bin/env  is
	  deprecated.
	interpreter_name
	  A package that installs a program that can be run by any version
	  of Python 3 must declare a dependency
	  on python3, with a versioned dependency if
	  necessary.
	
	  A package that installs a program that can be run by any version
	  of Python 2 must declare a dependency
	  on python2, with a versioned dependency if
	  necessary.
	
	  If the program needs the public Python module foo, the
	  package must depend on the binary package that installs
	  the foo module. See Section 3.3, “Module Package Names” for the
	  naming of packages that install public Python modules.
	
	    A program that specifies python3
	    or python as its interpreter may require its own
	    private Python modules. These modules should be installed
	    in /usr/share/, or
	    module/usr/lib/ if the modules are
	    architecture-dependent (e.g. extensions).
	  module
The rules explained in Section 3.7, “Modules Byte-Compilation” apply to those private modules: the byte-compiled modules must not be shipped with the binary package, they should be generated in the package's post-install script using the current default Python version, and removed in the pre-remove script. Modules should be byte-compiled using the current default Python version.
	    Programs that have private compiled extensions must either
	    handle multiple version support themselves, or declare a tight
	    dependency on the current Python version (e.g. Depends:
	    python3 (>= 3.5),
	    python3 (<< 3.6).
	  
	  A program which requires a specific minor version of Python must
	  specify the versioned
	  interpreter python. The
	  package that installs the programs must also specify a dependency
	  on
	  X.Ypython and on any
	  packages that install necessary modules.
	X.Y
The notes on installation directories and byte-compilation for programs that support any version of Python also apply to programs supporting only a single Python version. Modules to be byte-compiled should use the same Python version as the package itself.