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What can we learn from programming language version numbers?

Analyzing the version numbers of 621 programming languages

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May 25, 2024 — I just pushed version 93.0.0 of my language Scroll. Version 93!

Why so many versions? I use Tom Preston-Warner's Semantic Versioning (2011).

In particular, I followed his advice in Major Version Numbers are Not Sacred.

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Pushing so many major versions was no big deal because Scroll was a toy.

But Scroll now has a novel feature that makes it very useful.

I need to decide if I should ship fewer major versions with higher quality.

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Let's do some research on what other programming language developers are doing.

I added version number data to over 600 languages in PLDB.

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What major version are programming languages on?

0Min 1Median 2.9Average
73%< v3 95%< v10 99%< v30

Wow! No languages in the top 400 have surpassed 30 major versions.

Erlang, at version 27, ranks #34 and is the only top 100 language with more than 25 major versions.

My language, at version 93, is a huge outlier. Maybe I've done something wrong 😳.

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Let's plot version number by rank.

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We can see that there is a positive correlation between how many major versions a language has and how popular it is.

However, we can also see that 5 of the top 10 languages are on version 5 or less.

We can also see that ~15 of the top 25 languages are on version 5 or less.

If you have a great model of your core ideas, you can ship fewer major versions.

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What's the relationship between age of the language and the current major version?

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Did Semantic Versioning, published in 2011, change release rates of major versions of programming languages?

No. As you can see:

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So, what did I learn?

TIL I did SemVer wrong. In particular, I missed this part:

If you’re changing the API every day you should...still be in version 0.y.z

Whoops!

It took me about 5 years to figure out what Scroll 1.0.0 should be. I should be on version 0.93.0, not version 93.0.0.

No big deal. I will soon release Scroll 100.0.0, and from then on will have far fewer major releases.

An ounce of deep thought on the core of your language is worth a pound of major releases!

Other things I learned

I learned a few things today. Hope you did too!

Notes




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