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by brigandish
2231 days ago
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> The second set of digits represents major releases. The third set represents point releases. It's called being facetious. Regardless, Xcode definitely does not use the 2nd digit for major releases[1], which does require 10.15. > Windows Vista… Completely irrelevant. > Also, if your machine supports 10.14, it supports 10.15. The last MacBook Pro that dropped support for anything more recent came out in 2011. Yeah, the reality for my machine is that the upgrade did not take, which is funny considering I only tried to upgrade because of the Xcode requirements. > Nobody's asking you to buy a new laptop. They sell hardware. If you think they introduce breaking changes to the operating system tied to the hardware because of necessity then I have a bridge to sell you. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xcode#Xcode_11.x_(since_SwiftU... |
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Then stop being facetious. It wasn't clear you were being facetious, anyway.
> Completely irrelevant
No, it isn't, not to the point I was making. You also don't get to decide what's relevant to a point someone else is making.
The point is that Vista's version number is 6.0, 7's was 6.1, 8's was 6.2, and 8.1's was 6.3. All seemingly minor version number bumps, all major releases.
> Yeah, the reality for my machine is that the upgrade did not take
That's unfortunate — but nobody else's problem. If you have a capable machine, harping on about ...
> They sell hardware
... doesn't really stand. They may be selling hardware — but you don't have to buy any.