Vibe-Coding-Universal Replaces Vague 'Old Version' Label With Explicit 'v1.0' Tag
A recent commit in the open-source vibe-coding-universal project replaced the ambiguous label 'Old Version' with the explicit identifier 'v1.0' in its feature comparison tables. The original tables listed the earliest release using a generic descriptive term while all later releases carried precise version numbers, creating an inconsistency that forced users to consult external changelogs. The single-line fix brings the first release in line with semantic versioning conventions, ensuring all table entries use machine-readable, referenceable labels. With consistent versioning across the table, users can now clearly trace the feature progression from v1.0 to v2.0 without ambiguity. The change also aligns human-facing documentation with official git tags and package repository entries, reducing long-term drift between documentation and the project's versioning scheme.
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