Maybe, but if there's one thing that's clear in software, it's that every company seems to use different standards for what a version number is and means.
Only if they are doing it wrong. Particularly if they fail to indicate breaking changes with a first-number increment - this happened on a JS library we were using and it was completely and absolutely infuriating once we realized what was going on.
Maybe, but if there's one thing that's clear in software, it's that every company seems to use different standards for what a version number is and means.
Only if they are doing it wrong. Particularly if they fail to indicate breaking changes with a first-number increment - this happened on a JS library we were using and it was completely and absolutely infuriating once we realized what was going on.
https://semver.org/