That name will definitely confuse Jira users.
Let's stick to basic devision by 2.x and 3.x — it seems most intuitive and has
lots of examples inside ASF, look at the Tomcat for instance.
> On 25 Sep 2021, at 21:05, Saikat Maitra wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I like the major version update like Ignite 3
Today it is quite common to use calendar-based versioning scheme, e.g.
[1]. We can consider it for Ignite 3. Luckily versions will not clash.
[1] https://www.cockroachlabs.com/docs/releases/index.html
2021-09-27 10:49 GMT+03:00, Petr Ivanov :
> That name will definitely confuse Jira users.
>
> Le
How will not they clash if version is based only on date?
> On 27 Sep 2021, at 14:33, Ivan Pavlukhin wrote:
>
> Today it is quite common to use calendar-based versioning scheme, e.g.
> [1]. We can consider it for Ignite 3. Luckily versions will not clash.
>
> [1] https://www.cockroachlabs.com/d
I mean that Ignite 2.x will continue to use old scheme and Ignite 3
will be e.g. Ignite 21.1 and so on.
2021-09-27 14:57 GMT+03:00, Petr Ivanov :
> How will not they clash if version is based only on date?
>
>> On 27 Sep 2021, at 14:33, Ivan Pavlukhin wrote:
>>
>> Today it is quite common to use
Hello Igniters!
I’ve been helping with the Ignite social media channels for the last month now.
Lately I’ve been trying to increase awareness of our Javascript capabilities,
namely the thin client. Someone on our Twitter page had mentioned the npm
package hasn’t been updated in 3 years (!)
I s
Hi! I can share my experience how to drive this activity. Personally, I've
driven four recent releases of python thin client (pyignite). First of all,
you should start a discussion, this thread is a good place to start.
Secondly, you should prepare release branch (with help of commiters),
create re
Blog about Ignite.NET changes:
https://ptupitsyn.github.io/Whats-New-In-Ignite-Net-2.11/
On Fri, Sep 24, 2021 at 2:32 PM Alexandr Shapkin
wrote:
> Hello!
>
> Since the new release comes with more modules extracted into the
> extensions repo, I think it’s vital to update them as well. Consider
>