Thanks guys, now I understand that under the development I should use
snapshots, it sounds pretty good. Do some of you know how to deal with
the same project for different platforms. That's my first question and
I am really intersted how it is done by experts?

Tomek

2008/9/25 Wendy Smoak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Wed, Sep 24, 2008 at 9:51 PM, Tomek Maciejewski
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I have one more question. Let's assume that I deployed some artifact.
>> Some people have used it so they have copy of it in local repository.
>> Now I change something in artifact and deploy it with the same version
>> number. Will all the people which have a copy of previous version in
>> local repository still use old version, or maybe maven will see that
>> there is a new version of this library (with the same version number
>> as previous) and automatically download it from remote repository
>> during the building?
>
> You should use a version number ending in -SNAPSHOT, which tells Maven
> that it's under development.  The default policy is to check for
> updates once a day, but you can force a check with -U on the command
> line.
>
> If you change a released (non-SNAPSHOT) version, anyone who has
> already downloaded it will not see the changes unless they delete it
> from their local repo.  Releases are not supposed to be changed.
>
> --
> Wendy
>
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