*** To be a real C Xlib replacement * High-level functions: currently, there are mostly methods which directly correspond to X requests. There should be some simpler functions (e.g. Window.resize_window() in addition to Window.configure(), Drawable.rectangle() in addition to Drawable.poly_rectangle(), etc), and possibly also compound functions (e.g. create_pixmap_from_image() which would load an image file and create a pixmap of it). * Events: advanced event queue handling, e.g. filtering out events, only process events for a certain window, etc. * Extensions: as many extensions as possible should be implemented. *** Miscellaneous * Faster, faster! The protocol engine isn't very fast, despite the optimizations in version 0.7. I've started on this, but it is a big job. * The tread support and the protocol engine needs to be stress tested. They _seem_ to work, but that's no guarantee. * Much more documentation. * Test suite: a test suite which exercises the entire library would definitely be a nice thing to have. A start has been made for this, testing the protocol definitions. * Porting: the library should be runnable wherever there is a Python interpreter (with the necessary IPC support, that is.) * Widget set: a Python-optimized widget set using the X library would be really cute. The AnyGUI project could be a good front-end to use. * Server-side support: while we're at it, why not extend the library to provide at least the server-side parsing of the X protocol? It could be usable for writing X proxies, or for that matter, a complete X server in Python (this might be a little too spaced-out, though...)