After takin a swig o' Arrakan spice grog, Gaetano Mendola <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> belched out: > Peter Eisentraut wrote: > >> Alvaro Herrera wrote: >> >>>What was the rule for increasing the first number after just before >>>7.0? >> That was just to avoid having to release a 6.6.6, which Jan had >> clearly been working towards. :-) >> Seriously, major version jumps correspond to epoch-like changes, >> like when the code moved out of Berkeley, or when we switched from >> bug fixing to adding features. Maybe the next epoch would be after >> a hostile takeover of firebird. But right now I see no epoch >> change, just a potential for confusing users. Consistency and >> humbleness can be a virtue. > > Have a win32 native implementation is not a epoch change about you ?
I saw mention in the thread that the shift to 7.0 took place when people realized that 6.5 should have been 7.0. I think that the set of new features here will fairly likely warrant the "8.0" moniker; the 'consistent' way to go would be to call this version 7.5, and then 8.0 would soon follow, and be the release where some degree of improved "maturity" has been achieved for: a) Win32 support b) Nested transactions (thereby leading to the ability to have exception handling support in stored procedures) c) PITR. It would be surprising for these to all be _completely_ ready for all purposes come 7.5.0. The reasonable thing might be to say "Forget 7.5.1; call it 8.0!" -- let name="cbbrowne" and tld="cbbrowne.com" in name ^ "@" ^ tld;; http://cbbrowne.com/info/linuxdistributions.html Computers in the future may weigh no more than 1.5 tons. -Popular Mechanics, forecasting the relentless march of science, 1949 ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly