It also provides consistency with date-based versions. And versions aren't decimals so thinking of them like that is not exactly useful. On Dec 23, 2014 11:43 AM, "Paul Moore"
On 22 December 2014 at 20:44, Marcus Smith
wrote: it would fail. you'd need ">1.7.0"
On Mon, Dec 22, 2014 at 12:36 PM, James Bennett
wrote: So, if PyPI has foo-1.7 and foo-1.7.1, does ">1.7" just fail to find anything installable?
I think the thing I'd missed, which makes this behaviour more understandable (for me) is that you wouldn't usually get that in reality. Projects tend to use a fixed number of digits in the version number, so it'd likely be 1.7.0 and 1.7.1, and you'd be writing
1.7.0.
Thinking of ">1.7" as "greater than the 1.7 series" sort of helps me as well...
Paul _______________________________________________ Distutils-SIG maillist - Distutils-SIG@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/distutils-sig