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While working on multiple projects I come cross a lot of cases in which the version number has a -SNAPSHOT suffix. For example

<version>1.0.0-SNAPSHOT</version>

Why is this naming used? Couldn't people just use a different version number? What exactly hides behind the meaning of the snapshot suffix?

Thanks!

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2 Answers 2

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A snapshot version is a version that is currently under development and not production-ready.

It is also a guideline that you shouldn't use this version in your application, since its API is not guaranteed to be stable.

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    Content of a -SNAPSHOT artifact is also considered mutable - i.e. maven will check periodically if there isn't a more recent .jar with the same version. Non -SNAPSHOT versions are considered immutable (i.e. if we have cached foo-1.2.3 already, it's never checked again)
    – ptyx
    Feb 12, 2014 at 18:53
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SNAPSHOT means latest version that hasn't been released yet, usually a version in development.

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