On Thursday, 4 November 2021 at 05:59:43 UTC, zjh wrote:
I use C++ and always add C++ latest
switch, which is very convenient.
November 04, 2021 Re: Phobos version naming | ||||
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Posted in reply to zjh | On Thursday, 4 November 2021 at 05:59:43 UTC, zjh wrote: I use C++ and always add |
November 04, 2021 Re: Phobos version naming | ||||
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Posted in reply to Adam Ruppe | On Thursday, 4 November 2021 at 00:46:35 UTC, Adam Ruppe wrote:
> For example we might not actually use "Stdv2" but instead "std2023". In years prior to that, it is now obviously a future version and thus subject to change, then when 2023 comes along, it is officially stablized and we can start playing with std 2024.
>
What if it's behind schedule? You'd have to explain to people in 2025 why the future version name is std2023. Also, std2023 is ugly.
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November 04, 2021 Re: Phobos version naming | ||||
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Posted in reply to Adam D Ruppe | On Wednesday, 3 November 2021 at 19:40:30 UTC, David Gileadi wrote: > >Bikeshed aside, named library versions may be more memorable but they have the downside that it's much harder to see two names and know which one is newer and/or current. We wasting time! why not std2, just do it. Then we can change it with finger movement. |
November 04, 2021 Re: Phobos version naming | ||||
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Posted in reply to Andrei Alexandrescu | On Thursday, 4 November 2021 at 04:07:56 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
> On 11/3/21 8:25 PM, Guillaume Piolat wrote:
>> My pick is stdnext.stuff
>
> And then? stdnextnext?
No, instead of being backwards compatible you aim for being forward compatible.
So you prepare for the next major language release by giving early access through a "next" namespace. When you hit the major language release you rename it to "std" and phase out the outdated "std".
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November 04, 2021 Re: Phobos version naming | ||||
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Posted in reply to zjh | On Thursday, 4 November 2021 at 06:06:33 UTC, zjh wrote: >I use C++ and always add What I find annoying with C++ (Clang and Xcode) is that the next language features are implemented and ready before the standard library. It can take like a year or so before we get the standard library up to date in C++. (Microsoft currently do better, I think). |
November 04, 2021 Re: Phobos version naming | ||||
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Posted in reply to Ola Fosheim Grøstad | On Thursday, 4 November 2021 at 08:49:52 UTC, Ola Fosheim Grøstad wrote: better, I think).
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November 05, 2021 Re: Phobos version naming | ||||
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Posted in reply to Paul Backus |
On 04/11/2021 4:50 PM, Paul Backus wrote:
> Given that code.dlang.org already has infrastructure in place for distributing many releases of the same package, I think it makes sense to use it for at least some of Phobos's distribution, if not all of it. And my gut reaction is that shipping *every* release in the official D distribution would be too much--at the very least, new users should not be presented with dozens of standard-library releases to choose from right off the bat. So, the right answer is probably somewhere between those two extremes.
Yeah I am well past the point of laughing about all of this versioning stuff.
Give us a dub package for anything that hasn't matured.
Once matured, it goes into Phobos.
Too much energy is being wasted on what should be a pretty streamlined process.
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November 04, 2021 Re: Phobos version naming | ||||
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Posted in reply to Max Samukha | On Thursday, 4 November 2021 at 06:12:43 UTC, Max Samukha wrote:
> What if it's behind schedule?
Then you cut features and/or redouble their efforts to get back on schedule.
I assure you, the emperor is not as forgiving as I am.
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November 04, 2021 Re: Phobos version naming | ||||
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Posted in reply to Andrei Alexandrescu | On Wednesday, 3 November 2021 at 15:37:05 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
> Currently it's std.v2 but I'm unclear how it goes from there. By semver we'd go with std.v2_0_1 and so on.
I'm fine with std.v2 or next.std or next.std.v2 or future.std or similar. They all show a clear name that these will be the next version. std2023 and std.v2_0_2 and the lot looks ugly and seem unpractical in a sense where you will have to maintain a multitude of minor versions.
It would be easier to have std.v2 and std.v3 because then it's simply a question of remapping the functions to major versions. It's already a little painful trying to map out which compilers version support what.
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November 04, 2021 Re: Phobos version naming | ||||
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Posted in reply to Adam Ruppe | On Thursday, 4 November 2021 at 00:46:35 UTC, Adam Ruppe wrote:
> On Wednesday, 3 November 2021 at 22:21:53 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
>> Prolly we could have both so people could use either "io" or "std2".
>
> What I would actually do is make it the year of the planned stable release.
>
> For example we might not actually use "Stdv2" but instead "std2023". In years prior to that, it is now obviously a future version and thus subject to change, then when 2023 comes along, it is officially stablized and we can start playing with std 2024.
>
> This pace of putting major breaking changes in a yearly schedule would also give people realistic expecations. No, it won't break next month, but yes, it might next year.
Why no to do the similar thing as C++ std does? The working name of the next version is std2x, then as soon as it's stabilized, it's renamed to std2023. The following version might be std2y -> std2027, for example. We can use "a", "b", "c" etc. to ensure that we don't run out of letters within the decade.
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