Hi Raif, On Wed, 2006-03-01 at 05:51 +1100, Raif S. Naffah wrote: > what is the expected milestone (definition and how to measure it) to > reach before releasing a version 1 --or 1.4 whatever that final number > will be? According to our homepage it is: "GNU Classpath 1.0 will be fully compatible with the 1.1 and largely compliant with the 1.2 API specification and will have a stable API for interacting with virtual machines." Which I think we have now (plus lots of additional 1.3, 1.4 and 1.5 stuff). Personally I think 1.0 is when we feel it isn't just some experimental code anymore, but that people can use GNU Classpath for real world applications, and we feel comfortable supporting those users. Which also has been true (for years). Just look at any recent distribution. Seeing all the comments to my simple question "what should the next snapshot release version be?" I get the feeling 1.0 means a lot of different things to a lot of different people. That was really why I just suggested to drop the "0." from our version number (21), or use date based version numbers (6.03). I thought we could avoid a discussion about the semantics of 1.0, while still showing how mature our product is. Guess I was wrong :) I actually think the projects based on GNU Classpath (gcj, kaffe, ikvm, cacao, jamvm, ovm, jikesrvm, sablevm, jnode, etc.) is what it is all about. And funnily enough most of those projects, except ikvm and jnode, have a version numbers (much) higher than 1.0 (cacao is almost at 1.0, with their latest 0.95 release). Cheers, Mark -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part Url : http://developer.classpath.org/pipermail/classpath/attachments/20060301/9937a6a5/attachment.pgp