• DacoTaco
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    4 months ago

    The mit license allows forking, merging, modifying and releases of modified code. Yes id assume so yes :)
    I have a lot of bad things to say about some microsoft teams and some microsoft managers (cough fluentui webcomponents team cough ), but in general the .net team is a nice one and ive had several nice encounters with few of its devs.
    Just dont know what the actual bloody fuck the manager/team was thinking dropping linux when they made maui…

    • @taladar@sh.itjust.works
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      14 months ago

      What I would really like to know is the thought process behind using the oldest dependency version in a version range in .NET instead of the newest like literally every other package or dependency manager ever made. That design couldn’t be worse if it was designed to maximize security holes.

      • DacoTaco
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        14 months ago

        Care to elaborate? I dont fully follow ^^; Feel free to also dm me or something

        • @taladar@sh.itjust.works
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          14 months ago

          If you specify that e.g. a dependency should be between version >= 4.0 and < 4.1 in dotnet and there are versions 4.0.0 and 4.0.1 available pretty much all other systems choose 4.0.1 based on the idea that that will include a fix while dotnet chooses 4.0.0 based on the idea that that is “more stable”.

          • DacoTaco
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            14 months ago

            Ah, thats fair. I think thats fixable using wildcards in the packagereference in the csproj, but id need to check. I too would expect it to choose 4.0.1 unless a patch release needs a big update or something