It's a version number *of a file*.  A file is (usually) just a small part of a
product.  It's usually the product's version number you should care about.

Of course, you can always hack your version of CVS to do what you want.

Noel




[EMAIL PROTECTED] on 2000.08.09 16:44:25

To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:
Subject:  Re: Version numbers




At 04:20 PM 8/9/2000 -0400, you wrote:
>No, nor should you be concerned about internal revision numbers.  I mean, so
>what if the number is 1.7 rather than 1.6.001?  What difference (other than
>aesthetic) does it make?

to me it's more like a version number, but I understand where I
misunderstood those numbers.  It would be nice to have versioning going so
it will auto number things the way you like them, and still maintain its
internal numbers.


--
Robert S. Sfeir
"If We Quit Voting, Will They All Go Away?"






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