On Tue, 3 Oct 2023 at 00:45, Greg Troxel via QGIS-Developer
wrote:
>
> Andreas Neumann via QGIS-Developer
> writes:
>
> My impression is also that 3.30, 3.32 are stable and entirely usable for
> users.
Small clarification here: the 3.x.0 releases AREN'T considered stable,
you should wait for 3.
On Tue, 3 Oct 2023 at 00:16, Andreas Neumann via QGIS-Developer
wrote:
> About your second question: don't nail me down on this but all 3.x versions
> should open with the newest 3.x version - it should be even possible to open
> version 2 files with the latest 3.x version.
It's definite! If y
Thanks everyone, and thanks Harrissou for making those changes.
In terms of how we explain support, perhaps Selma might have some
thoughts (with her work on documentation).
Selma - see thread below, but briefly some people are getting very poor
download speeds. They are then donating and aski
Andreas Neumann via QGIS-Developer
writes:
> 3.34 will be the next LTR, but not yet in October 2023, but only
> starting from end of February 2024. In the table
> https://qgis.org/en/site/getinvolved/development/roadmap.html#release-schedule
> you can check the third column labeled "Long-Term Rep
Hi Raffael,
3.34 will be the next LTR, but not yet in October 2023, but only
starting from end of February 2024. In the table
https://qgis.org/en/site/getinvolved/development/roadmap.html#release-schedule
you can check the third column labeled "Long-Term Repo" to see at what
time frame whic
Hello
I would like to know if this is correct, that the next long term release of a
stable QGIS version (3.34.0) will be at the end of October 2023?
If this is correct I would like to know if I worked with an older version and I
want to continue working on this project with the upcoming LTR what