On 6 March 2012 20:33, Lukas Reichlin <lukas.reich...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 06.03.2012, at 20:48, Carnë Draug wrote: > >> On 6 March 2012 14:23, Lukas Reichlin <lukas.reich...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> Hi all, >>> >>> I've just posted control-2.3.50 (SVN Revision 9754) in the package forum >>> [1]. Please upload it to the server. The changes are listed in the NEWS >>> file [2]. The main features are frequency-weighted model and controller >>> order reduction tools as well as cleanup efforts under the hood. >> >> Done. Just uploaded it to the server and updated the documentation. >> >> Curious about one thing, why is the first release of the 2.3 version >> the number 50? This also happened for the 2.1 version but not for 2.2. >> Is this matching the octave core where odd numbers are development >> releases? In that case, should 2.3.X releases be considered >> development releases? >> >> Carnë > > Well, I tried to use the octave core scheme. I use odd numbers > (2.1.50-2.1.55) to add new features / make important changes. When I reached > my goals, I release a package with an even number (2.2.0). It is followed by > minor revision (2.2.1 - 2.2.5) for bugfixes and small additions. I am going > to release 2.3.5* versions until my features for 2.4.0 are ready: > - model and controller reduction (done) > - clean up oct-files (done) > - "multiplot" feature > - system identification > > There was a 2.1.5* release about every fortnight for people who wanted the > latest features as soon as they became ready. Those who didn't want to > install weekly updates could wait for 2.2.0. In general, there's no > difference in quality between even and odd versions. > > Do you think it is confusing? Shall I do it differently?
I think it's fine. But I don't think most users know about this "rules" for reading the version numbers and are probably not even aware of the odd number versions since they are not officially released. I believe only the users that build octave from development sources actually use them. For example, octave core NEWS has no reference to the odd version numbers. I don't mind the numbers you use and I understand them now but I don't think most users will. Maybe at the very top of the NEWS file you could explain this in 2 lines. As with the octave core users who know about those release numbers (want the very latest code) are the ones who build from development sources, the ones who want the latests from control, are probably building from development source as well. Carnë ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Keep Your Developer Skills Current with LearnDevNow! The most comprehensive online learning library for Microsoft developers is just $99.99! Visual Studio, SharePoint, SQL - plus HTML5, CSS3, MVC3, Metro Style Apps, more. Free future releases when you subscribe now! http://p.sf.net/sfu/learndevnow-d2d _______________________________________________ Octave-dev mailing list Octave-dev@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/octave-dev