Re: The case for version number inflation
От | Ian Lawrence Barwick |
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Тема | Re: The case for version number inflation |
Дата | |
Msg-id | CAB8KJ=j9k--T2dyezsTRhQqqjVfBFoFr1T8hHjy=xS2s95Sy+A@mail.gmail.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | The case for version number inflation (Josh Berkus <josh@agliodbs.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: The case for version number inflation
Re: The case for version number inflation Re: The case for version number inflation |
Список | pgsql-advocacy |
2013/2/28 Josh Berkus <josh@agliodbs.com>: > Folks, (...) > As a counterargument, few other open source databases use inflationary > version numbers, even the NoSQL ones. I can think of a certain very popular open source database whose numbering scheme jumps about all over the place without much apparent logic (5.1 to 5.5, current stable release started at 5.6.10, meaning 5.6.01 ~ 5.6.09 were pre-production releases - I think) but which doesn't seem to have affected its market share too badly. Compared to that, PostgreSQL's version numbering is a bastion of sanity which I - hope - anyone with the requisite skills to handle SQL and/or make IT-related decisions should be able to grok without too much difficulty. If PostgreSQL were being pitched as a mass-market consumer product, then yes it might be worth going through the hassle of a version numbering change and dealing with the confusion arising from two systems. On the other hand millions of iOS and Android users don't seem to be *too* fazed by a versioning system which is at 6.1.2 and 4.2.2 respectively. (And please, let's not even think about using a cutesy naming scheme - "Excited Elephant", "Flirty Foreign-Key", "Grumpy Groupby" etcetera ;) ) Ian Barwick
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