| ▲ | bmacho 4 hours ago |
| The numbers have become meaningless noise already. This release should've been called 26.1, then 27.0, 27.1, 28.0 and so on. Year.version. How Canonical does it with Ubuntu. The current numbering scheme is annoying and distracting, bears no information yet is still error prone. |
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| ▲ | the-smug-one 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] |
| I don't see the point, just increment it every release. Don't see what errors are prone either |
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| ▲ | samus 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I believe that's by design: applications are encouraged to upgrade often. That's usually a smooth process for standard-conforming applications. Applications that need to move slower can stick to LTS versions. LTS hopping has become a little bit more viable since the interval has been shortened to two years, i.e., four major versions. |
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| ▲ | bmacho 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | > I believe that's by design: applications are encouraged to upgrade often. I'm not sure what's your thought process here. I'm not saying they should have a release every 2 years instead of every half a year, but that their numbering scheme is bad. It makes upgrading harder. If they'd just put the date in the version field, people would know how old the software is (this applies to every software btw not just Java and Ubuntu). Their current versioning system doesn't help anyone in any imaginale circumstance. | | |
| ▲ | re-thc 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | > If they'd just put the date in the version field, people would know how old the software is Does it tell you anything? If this "software" just bumps the date and never provides anything meaningful it is useful to you? It's about the substance. |
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| ▲ | doodpants 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| > Year.version I think you mean "(Year % 100).version". Or is it "(Year - 2000).version"? Pardon me for being overly pedantic, but ever since Y2K it really bugs me when someone refers to a 2-digit number as "the year". |
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| ▲ | re-thc 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] |
| > The current numbering scheme is annoying and distracting, bears no information yet is still error prone. > This release should've been called 26.1, then 27.0, 27.1, 28.0 and so on. And how does that bear any information any differently? |
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| ▲ | bmacho 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | When I encounter a version number I mostly want to know either: - what are the major characteristics of the program
- how old is the program
Traditional software versioning helps in the first case: they bump version after a big event (new feature, rewrite, etc). Date based versioning helps in the second case. (I prefer date based versioning over traditional or semver.) Their numbering system doesn't help anyone in any case. It's just... there. A noise.E.g. just this article title on HN: "Java 27: What's New?" doesn't tell you whether Java 27 is old or new. "Java 26.1: What's New?" would. | | |
| ▲ | re-thc 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | > doesn't tell you whether Java 27 is old or new. "Java 26.1: What's New?" would How does 26.1 tell you that? Because you "assume" it is a date? It also still doesn't? How do you know the new 1 isn't 26.100? > Traditional software versioning helps in the first case: they bump version after a big event They pretend to. It's given most developers headaches in terms of you have to have something to bump the version so either they make something up or never do it and so fails your test either way. At the end of the day either: You care: a quick check won't hurt. It's twice a year. You don't care: what difference does it make? |
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