The choice of a camelCase name is something Apple will probably regret a bit down the road, probably for the same reason it makes my eyes bleed when I see it outside of a programming context... Unless there's a secret plan to relegate the whole Mac line to dedicated workstations for turning out iDevice apps of course.
Anyway, replying to Siguza's question
Then what do you propose we call the operating system in general, without a version attached?
That depends a bit on how general you want this to be, and also in what context you're asking (e.g. labels in/for progamming code or for precompiled binaries of your applications). The general name for the underlying operating system is Darwin, but that is officially the Unixy basis without the GUI layers.
If you want something more specific to Macs you could indeed use "macos" rather than "darwin", though with Apple's recent decision to use macOS as a distinguishing name makes the all-lowercase version ambiguous. Maybe "mac_os" to indicate it applies to all versions of the Mac OS?
You can also adopt the position that Macs are only set apart by their operating system, which was probably true always (was a PPC Mac running Linux ever any different from, say, and IBM PowerPC workstation running Linux?). And that means you could just use "mac". Of course that ignores the existence of Hackintoshes, but that distinction should be moot anyway.
FWIW, the Qt guys now use macOS throughout to align with Apple's whim. I cannot condone that because it implies that everyone should be running the latest Mac OS version.
Note also that Apple have been using MACOS and simply MAC for conditional coding purposes for a long time, allowing constructs like
#if QT_MACOS_PLATFORM_SDK_EQUAL_OR_ABOVE(__MAC_10_11)
[osx]
seems to no longer apply.