Per availability of download links for at least one platform on the [official download page](https://www.python.org/downloads/).
If there will be known that there won’t be such a version, resolves N/A.
If no one will be certain if the version is just postponed, resolves to the upper bound.
Likewise, if there will be such a version but later than the upper bound given, resolves to the upper bound.
I picked the version number as to be mildly interesting (1.12 is too soon and 1.42 is too far away). Feel free to suggest ideas for tweaking this market before it’s too late (a couple of months?) and/or for possible future markets of this kind.
Python 3.8 was released in October 2019, Python 3.9 in October 2020, Python 3.10 in October 2021, Python 3.11 in October 2022. The pattern doesn't hold for earlier versions: Python3.7 was released in June 2018. But "a new version once a year" seems like a very good baseline. So I'm guessing Python 3.12 in 2023, ..., Python 3.15 in 2026.
@wadimiusz Damn I was off by one; I remembered there were almost one a year for a while but I was lazy to read exact release dates. Suspicious string of Octobers though.
@degtorad I always break up in Octobers. Perhaps they are waiting for me to break up with my partner before they release a new Python.
@degtorad That is a great idea, actually. That’s the creative solution I’ve been looking for.