Mercurial > emacs
view admin/notes/BRANCH @ 107843:64cb38b81502
(define-minor-mode): A nil argument to the minor mode turns the mode ON.
author | Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> |
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date | Mon, 12 Apr 2010 21:03:04 -0400 |
parents | bd5f6908042c |
children | d5a9f1780d1e |
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This file describes the bzr branch in which it is maintained. Everything below the line is branch-specific. ________________________________________________________________________ This is the trunk (sometimes mistakenly called "HEAD"). When people say "use the development version of Emacs" or the "bzr version of Emacs", this is the branch they are talking about. Emacs development takes place on the trunk. Most of the time, Emacs hackers add to it relatively free of constraint (aside from proper legal / accounting practices), although sometimes there is related discussion on the emacs-devel mailing list. Sometime before the release of a new major version of Emacs (eg 22.1), a "feature freeze" is imposed on the trunk. No new features may be added after this point. This is usually many months before the release. During this time, there is no official place for development of new features. Shortly before the release, a release branch is created. For example, EMACS_22_BASE or EMACS_21_1_RC for Emacs 22.x and 21.x, respectively. (Unfortunately the naming scheme has not always been consistent.) The release branch is used to make the release (22.1), and all later members of the series (22.2, 22.3, etc). Generally, only bug-fixes have been allowed in the minor releases, although in 22.x, self-contained new features were allowed on a case-by-case basis. From the point that a release branch is created, the trunk is free for development for the next major version.