How should our community treat out-of-date and abandoned Apps?

Sometimes a dev is away for an extended period of time, then returns to development. Sometimes an app is officially abandoned but still functions well. Sometimes an app may be under active development but not yet compatible with the latest version of Lemmy.

Should these apps be excluded from our Apps list? Which ones? What criteria should we use? Should we maintain a list of “Old Apps” for posterity, as a code database, etc?

  • Blaze@dormi.zone
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    4 months ago

    I guess if an app does not support the latest version of Lemmy it can be considered as “old” or at least “non-current”, as Lemmy devs make sure to announce API changes in advance.

    Probably having that information about them would be nice. Depends how much maintenance it is for you to update the megathread if someone updates the app and it becomes “current” again

    • gedaliyah@lemmy.worldOPM
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      4 months ago

      I would agree that 0.19 makes a good test, since about 99% of users are on it now. It’s unlikely that anyone looking for info about apps is interested in one that doesn’t work.

      Next question is: Is there an easy way to test whether an app works correctly?

      • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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        4 months ago

        The biggest change with 0.19’s API was the authentication method.

        In 0.18.5 and below, it’s done via cookie or as a parameter in the JSON body. In 0.19+, it’s via the Authorization Bearer {jwt} header. 0.19.0+ will not accept the JWT in the JSON body, and most of the apps I’ve seen don’t use cookies (I don’t recall off the top of my head if 0.19 still supports auth cookies or not).

        So the easiest test for an app’s 0.19.x support would be just trying to log into an 0.19 instance. Supported features vary among apps anyway, so I wouldn’t judge based on some 0.19 features not being implemented (yet?) as long as auth works.

        Another notable change is they fixed the missing timezone in their incorrect ISO 8601 timestamp fields in 0.19. If some apps were shoehorning in the missing Z to fix that, and didn’t account for that, then the published/edited times may not work, may break the app, or just be a few hours off.

        The other big change is the switch from offset-based pagination (page=3) to cursor-based pagination (page_cursor = abcdefg). Currently, both pagination methods are supported as of 0.19.3, but the offset-based method is currently deprecated and scheduled to be removed.

        After the next major release, that would probably be a decent litmus test.

    • gedaliyah@lemmy.worldOPM
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      4 months ago

      This is visible in the current pinned post, and apps are sorted (at the moment) by most recently updated. Do you think this is enough? Should we leave apps on the list indefinitely and let users make their own judgements?