Carl Sorensen <[email protected]> writes: > And especially, since you care about the chord display problem, you > have a specific reason to move to 2.15.22. > > Just recognize that you are moving to a development version that is > potentially unstable (but I know of no instabilities).
My usual experience with using development versions of various pieces of software I frequently use is that they are, after you had a suitable distance (depending on the pace of development and the release cycles) to the last stable release, more reliable and fun to work with as long as you frequently update them. The quality at some point starts to be better than that of the last stable version. It is less consistent, however: you might pick a lemon that warrants another update (or downgrade) soon. So if you are planning on doing just one update per year, the last stable version might be a good bet. If frequent updates don't scare you, tracking the last development release or even the current development source habitually can be rewarding. Also you tend to know better about what changes important to you end up in the next stable version if you don't let yourself be surprised by all changes at once. And of course, it is more rewarding if you tend to strain Lilypond's capacities that you often get problems fixed in a reasonable time frame after your initial report. And if you dislike a particular change for a good reason, you'll get to see it sooner and can protest more effectively. -- David Kastrup _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
