that’s with the assumption that the smallest increment was used every time
I sometimes increment things by adding the next decimal place
note: I am not a developer, just a dude making tools at work. but I somehow always end up incrementing something now and then from 1.21 to 1.211 because I wanted to avoid the “1.21 new actually newest” situation and bumping to 1.22 didn’t make sense. it’s like temporary versioning for me, WIP files
So +190 increment is totally ok for you, but +1 sometimes “didn’t make sense”. IT DOESN"T MAKE ANY SENSE! Oh, and you can use letters. 1.21 -> 1.21a looks MUCH more explanatory for your purposes than “+1 is too harsh increase, so I’ll increase on 190!”
Well that explains why I’m on version
0.0.7899999999998765
Even if a developer would make a commit every second, it would take 250 million years to reach version 0.0.7899999999998765
no it’s more like
Copy of New File (2)_finalThey go up to version 0.0.8, 0.0.9, then they go to 0.0.91, 0.0.92, … 0.0.99, 0.0.991, …
Most of the mistakes they have to fix are incorrect version numbering.
I have seen people just add '9’s to it, so to not upgrade the minor, so 2.6.997 gets 2.6.9997 and so on
Some people cannot math.
Wow a little bit of math is a dangerous thing
AI slop bbyyyyyyy!!!
Weak humans would use 250 million years, strong AI can slop it in 1 year.
/S
[email protected]
that’s with the assumption that the smallest increment was used every time
I sometimes increment things by adding the next decimal place
note: I am not a developer, just a dude making tools at work. but I somehow always end up incrementing something now and then from 1.21 to 1.211 because I wanted to avoid the “1.21 new actually newest” situation and bumping to 1.22 didn’t make sense. it’s like temporary versioning for me, WIP files
So +190 increment is totally ok for you, but +1 sometimes “didn’t make sense”. IT DOESN"T MAKE ANY SENSE! Oh, and you can use letters. 1.21 -> 1.21a looks MUCH more explanatory for your purposes than “+1 is too harsh increase, so I’ll increase on 190!”
so I actually use various different systems depending on my mood that day.
maybe I add a dash, maybe I use another decimal, maybe I use alpha characters.
none of it matters because they’re wiped out a few hours later
Bothers me that you wouldn’t go for 1.21.1 but you got the freedom to be WRONG. WRONG WRONG WRONG[1] if you want.
just teasing with this part of my reply :) ↩︎
I do that too sometimes lol but I’m just not a fan
if it were actual releases, yeah totally. but it’s just temporary files
Sub version tags make sense but for the the love of pie if you’re going to use a number at least separate it from the others, like
1.21-1= 0.21
;-)
Roffffl you’re pure evil
And here I was holding my breath for the legendary 0.0.7899999999998766. Thanks for ruining all my dreams.
You need to cast that float.