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Re: GCC version bikeshedding
- From: Markus Trippelsdorf <markus at trippelsdorf dot de>
- To: Richard Biener <richard dot guenther at gmail dot com>, g
- Cc: Eric Botcazou <ebotcazou at libertysurf dot fr>, Ian Lance Taylor <iant at google dot com>, gcc at gcc dot gnu dot org, Jason Merrill <jason at redhat dot com>, Jakub Jelinek <jakub at redhat dot com>
- Date: Tue, 29 Jul 2014 19:27:36 +0200
- Subject: Re: GCC version bikeshedding
- Authentication-results: sourceware.org; auth=none
- References: <20140720165506 dot GT3003 at laptop dot redhat dot com> <53CF8E48 dot 8090003 at redhat dot com> <CAKOQZ8yvTaos4Qo=cBEF070_rZkF9V-2L-76R6i7KLisBMEn-g at mail dot gmail dot com> <201407291845 dot 14107 dot ebotcazou at libertysurf dot fr> <2745817d-ab90-42eb-9e79-9805b4f11573 at email dot android dot com>
On 2014.07.29 at 19:14 +0200, Richard Biener wrote:
> On July 29, 2014 6:45:13 PM CEST, Eric Botcazou <ebotcazou@libertysurf.fr> wrote:
> >> I think that if anybody has strong objections, now is the time to
> >make
> >> them. Otherwise I think we should go with this plan.
> >
> >IMHO the cure is worse than the disease.
> >
> >> Given that there is no clear reason to ever change the major version
> >> number, making that change will not convey any useful information to
> >> our users. So let's just drop the major version number. Once we've
> >> made that decision, then the next release (in 2015) naturally becomes
> >> 5.0, the release after that (in 2016) becomes 6.0, etc.
> >
> >I don't really understand the "naturally": if you drop the major
> >version
> >number, the next release should be 10.0, not 5.0.
>
> 10.0 would be even better from a marketing perspective.
Since gcc is released annually why not tie the version to the year of
the release, instead of choosing an arbitrary number?
15.o
--
Markus