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How do Haxial version numbers work?

Haxial Numbers version
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How do Haxial version numbers work?

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Exactly the same way as regular decimal numbers. If you are wondering which version is the most recent, then it is whichever number is higher according to the normal rules of the decimal numbering system. Haxial does NOT use version numbers which violate the normal rules such as “1.1.2” (multiple decimal points, WTF??), or “1.10” being “higher” than “1.9” (1.9 is supposed to mean 1.90 in the normal system). Haxial version numbers can be written with a (single) decimal point, such as “1.23” or in fixed-point notation with no decimal point, such as “1230” which is always 4 digits so that it will sort properly in file names. When a version number is increased, the numerical amount by which it is increased is approximately reflective of the amount of change. For example, an increment from 1.23 to 1.24 usually means only a bug fix, with no new features. An increment from 1.24 to 1.3 means new features added.

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