stable", I'm kind of neutral here. But in the spirit of linux kernel numbering "when the number behind the dot gets too big, let's bump the major version", it's a good move.)
I didn't know this is the Linux kernel numbering scheme but it's pragmatic :). Actually, I happened to confused myself a few times in the past by not exactly remembering if the current version is 1.37, .38 or .39.
2.0 vs 2.1 is really easier to remember and distinguish.
I don't care actually, I'd have went with 1.23456789 until the end of times, but I'm not saying it's a good idea 😄 If you like 2.0, let's do it.
We just need to reach 3.1 and then all following releases will give one more precision level of pi. In a few years we might have 3.141592 or so :).
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