On 5/23/2017 4:04 AM, Janusz S. Bien via Unicode wrote:
Quote/Cytat - Manuel Strehl via Unicode <unicode@unicode.org> (Tue 23
May 2017 11:33:24 AM CEST):
The rising standard in the world of web development (and others) is
called
»Semantic Versioning« [1], that many projects adhere to or sometimes
must
actively explain, why they don't.
The structure of a »semantic version« string is a set of three integers,
MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH, where the »sematics« part lies in a kind of contract
between author and user, when to increment which part.
Perhaps I am missing something, but I don't understand this thread. Cf.
You are not missing anything, the OP is being obtuse. We just didn't
want to run the search for him. :)
A./
http://unicode.org/versions/
Version numbers for the Unicode Standard consist of three fields,
denoting the major version, the minor version, and the update version,
respectively.
The differences between major, minor, and update versions are as follows:
[...]
Best regards
Janusz