Oh no, here we go again :)

I agree that 2.1 is probably no longer applicable given the number of API and other changes that are occurring. 3.0 sounds like the logical next step. While I think this gives us some license to change a few major things, I do not think we should go off the deep end.

Mike

Kalnichevski, Oleg wrote:

Folks, Before we can start articulating our further plans, there's
one important decision to be made which cannot be put off any longer.
We have to decide on the next release number.

I am afraid with all the recent changes (new preference architecture,
HttpMethodDirector, better exception handling framework, saner
authentication code, Commons-Codec, and much more) we can no longer
consider the development version of HttpClient a minor release.
Version 2.1 would no longer be appropriate, I fear. Too much has
changed, even though the HttpMethod interface, the hallmark of 2.0
API architectural ugliness, is still there. Yet, version 3.0 is so
tightly associated in my mind with the much talked about complete API
overhaul, that I am hesitant to simply move one major version ahead
with the current release, leaving the API redesign for 4.0.

I personally tend to lean towards calling the next release 2.5. It is
unconventional, but, I feel, best reflects the magnitude of change in
HttpClient code.

What do you think?

Oleg

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