Re: 10.0

Mark Dilger <hornschnorter@gmail.com>

From: Mark Dilger <hornschnorter@gmail.com>
To: "David G. Johnston" <david.g.johnston@gmail.com>
Cc: "Joshua D. Drake" <jd@commandprompt.com>, PostgreSQL-development <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>
Date: 2016-06-20T20:08:46Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
> On Jun 20, 2016, at 1:00 PM, David G. Johnston <david.g.johnston@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> On Mon, Jun 20, 2016 at 3:08 PM, Mark Dilger <hornschnorter@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> > Do you have a problem with the human form and machine forms of the version number being different in this respect?  I don't - for me the decision of a choice for the human form is not influenced by the fact the machine form has 6 digits (with leading zeros which the human form elides...).
> 
> I don't have a problem with it if humans always use a two part number.  I don't read
> the number 100004 as being three parts, nor as being two parts, so it doesn't matter.
> What got me to respond this morning was Josh's comment:
> 
> "Realistically, though, we're more likely to end up with 10.0.1 than 10.1."
> 
> He didn't say "100001 than 10.1", he said "10.0.1 than 10.1", which showed that we
> already have a confusion waiting to happen.
> 
> Now, you can try to avoid the confusion by saying that we'll always use all three
> digits of the number rather than just two, or always use two digits rather than three.
> But how do you enforce that? 
> 
> ​You do realize he was referring to machine generated output here?  

No I don't, nor will anyone who finds that via a google search.  That's my point.
You core hackers feel perfectly comfortable with that because you understand
what you are talking about.  Hardly anybody else will.

As you suggest, that's my $0.02, and I'm moving on.

mark