Notepad++ v8.3 release
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Great work, π do rust bl
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@donho Using the latest release v8.3 the command line parameter -nLineNumber is not working anymore …
It open the file at the first line …
I’m using Windows 10 and notepad++ (x64) msi installer …
To reproduce go to de commando prompt e type notepad++ -n5 test.txt -
@hercules-queiroz-palombo said in Notepad++ v8.3 release:
Using the latest release v8.3 the command line parameter -nLineNumber is not working anymore …
It open the file at the first line …
I’m using Windows 10 and notepad++ (x64) msi installer …
To reproduce go to de commando prompt e type notepad++ -n5 test.txtKnown issue. It will be fixed in the next version.
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@michael-vincent said in Notepad++ v8.3 release:
It will be fixed in the next version.
which @Hercules-Queiroz-Palombo can confirm using the v8.3.1 Release Candidate
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As always, dude, thanks for all your work on this great editor!
Considering the many improvements in 8.3 (and 8.3.1), I don’t understand why v8.2.1 said “no update is available” when I checked from within it. Would more frequent auto-updates require too much bandwidth?
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@anderwriter said in Notepad++ v8.3 release:
Considering the many improvements in 8.3 (and 8.3.1), I don’t understand why v8.2.1 said “no update is available” when I checked from within it.
So this is a PERFECT example of exactly why it says no update is available.
8.3+ introduces HUGE file support, which caused a lot of new bugs to be introduced. Developers are working through the bugs, but probably at this point it isn’t a great idea for every single Notepad++ user out there to migrate to these versions. Just my 2c.
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which caused a lot of new bugs to be introduced.
So why dont you release it marked as a beta version ?
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@albrecht-hilker said in Notepad++ v8.3 release:
So why dont you release it marked as a beta version ?
There are “release candidate versions”; click HERE and glance down the list produced, and you’ll see them.
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@albrecht-hilker said in Notepad++ v8.3 release:
So why dont you release it marked as a beta version ?
Because this is the sequence that the developer usually follows:
- Develop updates
- Submit as Release Candidate (RC) version
- Wait for feedback from those users who are willing to download a RC version
- Iterate 1-2 until no “critical regressions” are reported
- Release as official version
- Wait for feedback from those users who are willing to download the released version without waiting for auto-update to be triggered (much larger number of people)
- Do a faster loop back to step 1 if critical regressions found after #4
- If no critical regressions found in #5, then trigger auto-update
The goal is for critical regressions to be found in #2 (the equivalent of “beta”), but not enough users download the RC/beta versions, so sometimes critical regressions are not found until #5. This happened to be one of those cases. Since the developer likes a fast-paced release cycle anyway, he feels that the current process works reasonably well – and the delay between #4 and #7 prevents “too many” people from downloading the release if a critical regression is found within a week or two of release.
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