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Semantic versioning three-part version number. Semantic versioning (aka SemVer) [1] is a widely-adopted version scheme [7] that encodes a version by a three-part version number (Major.Minor.Patch), an optional pre-release tag, and an optional build meta tag. In this scheme, risk and functionality are the measures of significance.
YAGO4, which was released in 2020, combines data that was extracted from Wikidata with relationship designators from Schema.org. [4] The previous version of YAGO, YAGO3, had knowledge of more than 10 million entities and contained more than 120 million facts about these entities. [5]
As such, they will continue to work, and dependencies will be resolved successfully, even if the minor version changes. Semantic Versioning (aka "SemVer" [6]) is one example of an effort to generate a technical specification that employs specifically formatted numbers to create a software versioning scheme. Private per application versions
Michel Klein, Dieter Fensel. Ontology versioning on the Semantic Web. In Proceedings of the International Semantic Web Working Symposium (SWWS). Stanford University, 2001. [CiteSeer] Plessers, Peter; De Troyer, Olga (2005). "Ontology Change Detection Using a Version Log". The Semantic Web – ISWC 2005. Lecture Notes in Computer Science.
DVC is a free and open-source, platform-agnostic version system for data, machine learning models, and experiments. [1] It is designed to make ML models shareable, experiments reproducible, [2] and to track versions of models, data, and pipelines. [3] [4] [5] DVC works on top of Git repositories [6] and cloud storage. [7]
Preston-Werner grew up in Dubuque, Iowa.His father died when he was a child. His mother was a teacher and his stepfather was an engineer. [11]He graduated from high school at Dubuque Senior High School and attended Harvey Mudd College in Claremont, California for 2 years before dropping out to pursue other endeavours.
The German company Hallo Welt! has been working on the development of an open source wiki based on MediaWiki since 2007. The origins of the later BlueSpice software go back to an initiative by the IBM CTO Gunter Dueck, who initiated an internal company wiki for IBM Germany in 2007 under the name "bluepedia". [3]
Mercurial is primarily a command-line driven program, but graphical user interface extensions are available, e.g. TortoiseHg, and several IDEs offer support for version control with Mercurial. All of Mercurial's operations are invoked as arguments to its driver program hg (a reference to Hg – the chemical symbol of the element mercury ).