Your message dated Sun, 10 Sep 2023 16:26:20 -0700
with message-id <87y1hdtxsz....@hope.eyrie.org>
and subject line Re: Bug#877697: debian-policy: discourage using all 4 digits 
numbers in Standards-Version
has caused the Debian Bug report #877697,
regarding debian-policy: discourage using all 4 digits numbers in 
Standards-Version
to be marked as done.

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877697: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=877697
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--- Begin Message ---
Package: debian-policy
Version: 4.1.1.0

Policy § 5.6.11, after describing the meaning of the digits in the
policy version, reads:

| Thus only the first three components of the policy version are
| significant in the Standards-Version control field, and so either
| these three components or all four components may be specified. [5]


Now, I've only got the impressions that packages should avoid using the
4th digit in their Standards-Version field, as that number has no
meaning when it comes to normative stuff.  I've seen on IRC/MLs all kind
of comments saying that the 4th digit should be avoided, and most
packages avoid it indeed, but this wording in the policy makes me feel
like it's pretty much the same.

-- 
regards,
                        Mattia Rizzolo

GPG Key: 66AE 2B4A FCCF 3F52 DA18  4D18 4B04 3FCD B944 4540      .''`.
more about me:  https://mapreri.org                             : :'  :
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Debian QA page: https://qa.debian.org/developer.php?login=mattia  `-

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--- Begin Message ---
Mattia Rizzolo <mat...@debian.org> writes:

> Policy § 5.6.11, after describing the meaning of the digits in the
> policy version, reads:

> | Thus only the first three components of the policy version are
> | significant in the Standards-Version control field, and so either
> | these three components or all four components may be specified. [5]

> Now, I've only got the impressions that packages should avoid using the
> 4th digit in their Standards-Version field, as that number has no
> meaning when it comes to normative stuff.  I've seen on IRC/MLs all kind
> of comments saying that the 4th digit should be avoided, and most
> packages avoid it indeed, but this wording in the policy makes me feel
> like it's pretty much the same.

After some discussion of this six years ago, it doesn't look like there
was any consensus to change Policy here.  Most people only use three
numbers.  Some people prefer to use four numbers to make it very clear
what version of Policy they looked at, and just in case informative
updates were relevant (probably a bug in Policy if that happens, but maybe
not).

I think it's therefore fine to use either, which is what Policy says now,
so I'm going to close this bug.

-- 
Russ Allbery (r...@debian.org)              <https://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/>

--- End Message ---

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