<div dir="ltr"><div><div>Trunk is always "the next version", 3.6 is whatever is built from 3.6<br>
branch.<br>
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On Wed, Mar 4, 2015 at 3:07 PM, Robert Ankeney <<a href="mailto:rrankene@gmail.com">rrankene@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br><br>> Why is the current build calling itself 3.7.0? Since 3.6 was just<br>
> released, it seems it should be called 3.6.0 or something less confusing.<br>
><br>
> Thanks!<br>
> Robert<br>
><br><br></div>As a user, I find this confusing. The next version could easily be 3.6.1. If someone gave me the current release today and I wanted to see what features this 3.7 contained, I would quickly discover that 3.6 was the current version, and would find this version suspect (unless it came from a Time Lord). If I searched after the formal release of 3.7, I would expect the 3.7 features listed and bugs corrected shown in the release notes to exist in this version. What would be less confusing to me would something like calling the current version 3.6.1, where an odd last digit implied an interim version, and an even last digit an actual release.<br><br></div>Just my two cents worth.<br><br>
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