Honestly +1
Even if it gets updates only once each 2 month...

On Wed, Oct 28, 2009 at 19:38, David Brewer <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> +1 from me on this.
>
> It has been difficult for us to explain to clients why the newest 1.2
> release is only supported until 11/2009 when the next release isn't
> out yet and the 1.0 release has support which is expiring only 2
> months later.
>
> This makes any kind of conservative long term planning very difficult.
> If I'm starting a project today, do I pick the old release which will
> expire in 3 months, the newest release which will expire in 1, or the
> unfamiliar beta release?
>
>
> On Wed, Oct 28, 2009 at 2:23 PM, Tom Boutell <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > I understand that support for Symfony 1.2 is supposed to end in
> > November with the release of Symfony 1.3.
> >
> > What practices, if any, in Symfony 1.2 code are expected to be
> > incompatible with Symfony 1.3?
> >
> > I know Symfony 1.3 won't be the huge change that Symfony 1.1/1.2 were.
> > But I still don't think it's wise to drop support for practices
> > considered valid in 1.2 the moment 1.3 appears.
> >
> > Other long-established open source projects do not do this on such a
> > scale. Valid PHP 5.0.x code runs on PHP 5.3.x, with deprecation
> > warnings sometimes, but it runs. And 5.2.x is definitely still being
> > actively supported after the release of 5.3.x.
> >
> > It is very difficult to make responsible proposals to clients without
> > ongoing support for at least the previous minor version series for
> > Symfony.
> >
> > I know Symfony 1.2 wasn't supposed to be an LTS release but the
> > reality is that it was the first stable-enough-to-use release of
> > Symfony since the end of the 1.0.x series, and people have migrated
> > long term projects to it out of necessity. I strongly feel it should
> > be supported for at least a year after the release of 1.3.
> >
> > I also think it is appropriate to fix serious bugs like
> > http://trac.symfony-project.org/ticket/6937 in the 1.2 series, making
> > features work substantially as advertised unless the only possible fix
> > is a backwards incompatible change. But I can live without embedded
> > M2M relation forms ever working in 1.2. What I find difficult to live
> > without is enough stability that the Symfony releases page doesn't
> > frighten clients off.
> >
> > BC breaks in a mature system should be a major-version thing (2.0, not
> > 1.0), and there should be ongoing support of the previous major
> > version for quite a while when they happen.
> >
> > I love this framework - please help me sell it to my clients as
> > something that will continue to work for at least a year. (:
> >
> > --
> > Tom Boutell
> > P'unk Avenue
> > 215 755 1330
> > punkave.com
> > window.punkave.com
> >
> > >
> >
>
> >
>


-- 
Sidney G B Ferreira
Desenvolvedor Web

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