Posted October 14, 2015
Dear forum readers !
I have some ideas already. Version numbers always exactly four numbers, let's say x.y.z.n.
As an example, the current Prison Architect package version is 2.1.0.3.
It seems x always equals 2, so I suppose 2 means "Good for release". 0 and 1 are for internal use only (maybe 0 isn't even used), and maybe when a package is considered RTM, x is simply increased by one.
y and z are more mysterious. While they seem to follow the usual versioning order, i.e. 2.0 > 1.3, it means there are changes considered "minor" and "major", but I don't know what makes a change minor or major from GOG's point of view.
n seems to follow a special rule, since despite being in the last position, it reflects minor and major changes as well, and seems to be the number of released packages. Hence 2.0.1.1 will never follow 2.0.0.1, but 2.0.1.2 will. And then, for example, 2.1.3.3, 2.3.0.4, 2.3.7.5. On the download page one can see "GOG-" followed by a number, I suppose that number is n.
Maybe I'm wrong however, any information is welcome !
I have some ideas already. Version numbers always exactly four numbers, let's say x.y.z.n.
As an example, the current Prison Architect package version is 2.1.0.3.
It seems x always equals 2, so I suppose 2 means "Good for release". 0 and 1 are for internal use only (maybe 0 isn't even used), and maybe when a package is considered RTM, x is simply increased by one.
y and z are more mysterious. While they seem to follow the usual versioning order, i.e. 2.0 > 1.3, it means there are changes considered "minor" and "major", but I don't know what makes a change minor or major from GOG's point of view.
n seems to follow a special rule, since despite being in the last position, it reflects minor and major changes as well, and seems to be the number of released packages. Hence 2.0.1.1 will never follow 2.0.0.1, but 2.0.1.2 will. And then, for example, 2.1.3.3, 2.3.0.4, 2.3.7.5. On the download page one can see "GOG-" followed by a number, I suppose that number is n.
Maybe I'm wrong however, any information is welcome !