Craig Bradney wrote: > The relates to the fact that 1.2 was becoming more and more outdated and > harder to maintain as we worked through 1.3.0 and higher and decided that > 1.3.3.x was really very stable and that the best way to manage our time and > bring the users more advanced functionality was to spend the time to > stabilise it and forget about 1.2.x. > > As I recall, this came about because it was sensed that the features added to 1.3.4 were a very big jump, so 1.3.3.x became an anomalous series that needed to be officially released due to the many useful changes from 1.2.x. > No matter what versions exist, you always have a stable, an unreleased > stable, > an unstable and an unreleased unstable. We will at least be able to make more > of a difference once we get to 1.4.0, where th 1.5.x series will then be the > unstable series. > My sense of this is that you have: A stable version, with a developmental version (svn) mainly related to bugfixes, rarely something might be backported, yet for various reasons highly unlikely any backporting will happen from 1.3.5 to 1.3.3.x The unstable version is a mix of added features and bugfixes. Here again, there is a bit of an anomaly related to the qt3 to qt4 jump.
Greg
