Most function parameters in python are "positional or keyword" arguments.
I.e. if I have this function:
def do_something(x, y):
pass
Then I can either call it like this, using positional arguments:
do_something(1, 2)
Or like this, using keyword arguments:
do_something(x=1, y=2)
Or like this, using a mixture of the two (but note that you're not allowed to have a positional argument after a keyword argument):
do_something(1, y=2)
But you can also define functions with positional-only or keyword-only parameters
Say I have this other function:
def do_something_else(x, /, y, *, z):
pass
In this function, I've marked x as being positional-only, because it comes before the /. And I've marked z as being keyword-only, because it comes after the *. y is a positional-or-keyword parameter, as it comes after the / but before the *. This means that these two attempts to call the function will fail: the first one because z is being called as a positional argument, and the second because x is being called as a keyword argument:
do_something_else(1, 2, 3) # will fail!
do_something_else(x=1, y=2, z=3) # will fail!
These two attempts, however, will both succeed — y is still a positional-or-keyword parameter.
do_something_else(1, 2, z=3) # fine
do_something_else(1, y=2, z=3) # fine
The `FutureWarning` message.
The FutureWarning message has nothing to do with the version of python you're using, but has everything to do with the version of pandas that you're using. Pandas is a third-party library, not a part of the python core, so the pandas version you're using is a completely different thing to the python version you're using.
The warning is letting you know that currently, you're fine to write pd.concat(dfs, self._concat_axis), but that they're planning on changing the definition of the function in a future version of pandas so that all arguments except for objs will be keyword-only. I.e., after they make this change, pd.concat(dfs, self._concat_axis) will raise an error, and you will have to write pd.concat(dfs, axis=self._concat_axis) instead. They are most likely considering making this change because calling functions with keyword arguments is often clearer and more readable for other people.