David Fetter <da...@fetter.org> writes: > On Mon, Aug 01, 2016 at 11:49:41AM -0400, Tom Lane wrote: >> Also, it strikes me that we need a new convention for how we talk about >> release branches informally. Up to now, mentioning say "9.5" without >> any further qualification in a PG-list message was usually sufficient >> to indicate a branch number, but I do not think that will work so well >> if one just writes "10". I'm tempted to start writing branch numbers >> as something like "PG10" or "v10". Thoughts?
> I don't see 10 as ambiguous. It's clear what's being talked about, > now that the decision has been made. It's clear what's being talked about as long as you already know that it is a version number. But it seems to me that we have often relied on the "x.y" notation itself to indicate that a version number is meant. Consider someone writing "I'm doing that in 10." Did he mean he's writing a patch for version 10, or he's going to do that 10 minutes from now, or what? Over the past couple of months I have already found myself writing "10.0" or "9.7^H^H^H10" to make it clear that I meant the next release version, because just "10" seemed too ambiguous. Maybe I'm worried about nothing and the ambiguity mostly came from our not having settled the two-or-three-part-version-number question, but I'm not sure. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers