I agree 1.5 would fit better. 1.1 sounds like a 'slight feature update'
but the changes are quite mayor. As said Fabien already presented his
ideas and some code-samples for the 2.0 release at SymfonyCamp, and
because BC is almost fully ensured, the major version number should not
change.

Bert-Jan

>
> Hi François,
>
> I fully agree with you, even though I fear that some people might be
> frightened of BC breaks. Wouldn't a version called "1.5" be a good
> compromise ? Other successful open-source projects have used this number
> for major improvements (Mozilla Firefox, for instance). As the so-called
> "Symfony 1.1" is not a revolution of Symfony's core, keeping the major
> number "1" sounds to me the best solution.
>
> xavier
>
> Francois Zaninotto a écrit :
>> Hi list,
>>
>> When I look at the trunk version of symfony, I see a lot of new and
>> exciting stuff, among which:
>>
>> - New CLI task system
>> - New plugin system
>> - New mixin/event system
>> - Improved caching system
>> - Total decoupling of objects
>> - Better exceptions
>> - Better routing
>> - Better logging
>> - Better storage
>> - More factories
>> - Less singletons
>> - I probably forgot some
>> - And many, many small improvements.
>>
>> All in all, the question about symfony 1.1 is more "what hasn't changed"
>> rather that "what has changed". The best part is that all that has
>> changed almost never breaks BC, which means that existing applications
>> will most of the time be able to take advantage of the new features.
>>
>> This leads me to a marketing concern: Should we call the next release
>> "symfony 1.1" or "symfony 2.0"? With all the new stuff in there, calling
>> it 1.1 would really be a poor choice (especially if you compare it with
>> what rails put in its 1.1...), spoiling the enhancements. On the other
>> hand, calling it symfony 2.0 might frighten people, especially BC wise.
>>
>> We know Fabien has great plans for after this next release, but their
>> version number could very well be 3.0 or 4.0.
>>
>> Last but not least, symfony 1.0 was released eight months ago, and no
>> enhancement was officially published since then. I think symfony
>> deserves a strong version upgrade to show that the development is very
>> active.
>>
>> What are your thoughts on the subject?
>>
>> François
>
> --
> Xavier Lacot         http://www.clever-age.com
> Clever Age - conseil en architecture technique
> Tél: +33 1 53 34 66 10  Fax: +33 1 53 34 65 20
>
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> >
>


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