I will leave this here:
The trade-off for getting millions of dollars of engineering investment in the TypeScript project is that marketing gets to control version numbers to a certain extent.
It's not really an unalloyed good anyway. If we followed semver rules exactly, literally every single release would be a major version bump. Any time we produced the wrong type or emitted the wrong code or failed to issue a correct error, that's a breaking change, and we fix dozens of bugs like that in every release. The middle digit just isn't useful for TypeScript in a strict semver interpretation.
If marketing, not developers, have control of the version numbers in any way/form, there's no guarantee that the public API will be stable in either x.y.* versions or *.*.* versions. For typescript, versions are meaningless.
.x
to signify a minor version wildcard. – pushkin Apr 23 '19 at 22:54const
assertions," which were introduced in Typescript 3.4 until I found this related question. Someone who frequents that tag more often than I could better answer your question – pushkin Apr 23 '19 at 22:57[typescript]
and a mentioning inside the question itself that it usestypescriptX.Y
not enough? – Lino Apr 26 '19 at 8:15