The caret sign (^
) is used for pub dependencies in Dart to indicate a range of version numbers are allowed. Specifically, any version from the specified version up to (but not including) the next non-breaking version is ok.
- So
^3.1.5
is the same as '>=3.1.5 <4.0.0'
- And
^1.2.3
would be the same as '>=1.2.3 <2.0.0'
It's shorthand for the longer form.
The ^
is saying, I want to automatically use the most up-to-date package from Pub as long as that update won't break anything in my app.
Notes
Clarification for versions less than 1.0.0
Originally I had thought that
^0.1.2
is the same as '>=0.1.2 <1.0.0'
(wrong!)
However, that is an incorrect understanding of Semantic Versioning. When the major version number is 0
(as in the 0
of 0.1.2
), the meaning is that the API is unstable and even minor version number changes (as in the 1
of 0.1.2
) can indicate a breaking change.
The Semantic Versioning article states:
Major version zero (0.y.z) is for initial development. Anything may change at any time. The public API should not be considered stable.
and also
How should I deal with revisions in the 0.y.z initial development
phase?
The simplest thing to do is start your initial development release at
0.1.0 and then increment the minor version for each subsequent release.
Thus, the following is the corrected form:
^0.1.2
is the same as '>=0.1.2 <0.2.0'
Thank you to Günter Zöchbauer for pointing out my error.
See also
^
were a special token for YAML (it isn't) you would find a link there. Independent of that for many the YAML spec doesn't make much sense ;-) – Anthon