Dicebot, el 31 de May a las 13:44 me escribiste: > On Friday, 31 May 2013 at 09:08:17 UTC, Leandro Lucarella wrote: > >This is just plain and completely wrong. I don't know many big-ish > >opensource projects that doesn't have release candidates, and I > >haven't > >see any "distribution" targeted at end users using release > >candidates. > > > >Have you ever see a Linux distribution shipping an rc kernel (that > >is > >not only installable by explicit user action) for example? > > Oh, I have meant it completely other way around - if some release is > made available through common channels it does not matter if it is > called "beta" or "RC", people will just start using it. Remember the > issue with UDA syntax?
The UDAs issue was completely different, there were no betas including UDAs. People using it were just using a development snapshot. > In mature projects RC does not differ that much from actual release > other than by extra regression fixes. But for D process is not THAT > smooth enough and it will take some time to settle things down. This is pretty much how it is now. Only minor regressions can be found in a beta/rc usually. There are no changes in behaviour or new features. -- Leandro Lucarella (AKA luca) http://llucax.com.ar/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------- GPG Key: 5F5A8D05 (F8CD F9A7 BF00 5431 4145 104C 949E BFB6 5F5A 8D05) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- All fathers are intimidating. They're intimidating because they are fathers. Once a man has children, for the rest of his life, his attitude is, "To hell with the world, I can make my own people. I'll eat whatever I want. I'll wear whatever I want, and I'll create whoever I want." -- Jerry Seinfeld
