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Generally speaking LiSP have broken backward compatibility many times, so you can be sure it's not a general direction :) I agree with this points:
That said, I value the opinion of everyone that want to contribute, and many changes have been introduced to address users requests, |
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Quick update on this 2d1e86e and 3c0ec1d, address some of what has been discussed here, pushing all values into the show files, plus, app and plugins versions are now saved into the show files. |
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Originally posted by @FrancescoCeruti in #266 (comment)
Just creating a new issue, because I have a general objection to this behaviour. If software always keeps the existing behaviour as the "default", a future variant of the software might appear confusing to new users, because all workflows are only working the way it was working in the early days.
It is hard for end users to discover that a certain behaviour is actually configurable to the demand.
I propose:
Backward compatibility is important, but the UX for newcomers is, too. Due to the nature of LiSP development, many design choices are heavily influenced by few opinions. If we want to make the software future-proof, decisions should take these multiple aspects into consideration.
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