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To get things started correctly, I'd like to define backwards compatibility as the following:

Maintaining the invariant that, amongst successive versions of a library or tool, software using that library or tool continues to build and execute with matching semantics (though perhaps different performance characteristics).

There is some wiggle room for defining if a change is properly backwards compatible. If we introduce a new identifier which conflicts with an old one, this may break a build, but most people accept this as "backwards compatible enough." Also, fixing a bug in an implementation may, in some cases, break something. But let's ignore the subtle cases, and instead just focus on the big picture: I released some new library, and it changed the type signature of a function, tweaked a data type, or significantly altered runtime behavior.

Let's just cut to the chase: striving for backwards compatibility is stupid, and we should stop doing it. I'm going to demonstrate why.

It doesn't stop bugs

Let's take as an assumption that you're actually writing proper changelogs for your libraries (seriously, please write proper changelogs for your libraries). If so, there's no reason why backwards compatibility is useful for preventing bugs.

When you are using a library, you're responsible for keeping up to date with new versions. When a new version of any dependency comes out, it's your sworn duty and sacred obligation to thoroughly review the changelog and ensure that any changes that may affect you are addressed in your code. It's just the bare minimum of good code maintenance.

I'll leave as a given that everyone is using some version of Semantic Versioning (SemVer), so breaking changes will never accidentally affect their code bases.

It's time well spent!

This may sound like a lot of time invested on a maintainers part. While it certainly takes some effort, this is an investment in your future, not just an expenditure. Requiring this maintenance level from library authors is a great forcing function:

It proves you're serious about maintaining your code. When I'm choosing between different libraries for a task, the library with regular updates to address changes in dependencies is always the higher quality one.

Conversely, a lack of frequent updates tells you that you shouldn't trust a piece of code. Bitrot is no joke; code gets bad over time! Having something that forces you to change code regularly is the best way to avoid bitrot.

It properly penalizes you for using too many dependencies. Encouraging decreased dependencies is a great way to avoid dependency problems!

Failure cases

I want to take as a case example two well-known cases of well maintained backwards compatibility, and demonstrate how destructive it is.

Java

Java is well known as an ecosystem that prefers stability over elegance, and we can see that this has led to a completely dead, non-viable platform. When generics were added to Java, they had the choice to either break their existing containers APIs, or add a brand new API. As we know, they made the foolish choice to introduce a brand new API, creating clutter (we hate clutter!).

But worse: it allowed old code to continue to run unmodified. How can we trust that that code is any good if no one has been forced to update it to newer APIs? They wasted a great opportunity for a quality forcing function on the entire ecosystem.

sqlite3

Once again seriously: sqlite3 is probably the most well designed C API I've ever seen, and by far the best low-level database API I've seen. Everything seems great with it.

But unfortunately, a few functions were misdesigned. For example, the sqlite3_prepare function was designed in such a way, leading to degraded error reporting behavior. To rectify this situation, the author made the (misguided) decision to introduce a new API, sqlite3_prepare_v2 , with a different type signature, which allows for better error reporting. (You can read the details yourself.)

This allows existing programs to continue to compile and run unmodified, even allowing them to upgrade to newer sqlite3 versions to get performance and stability enhancements. What a disaster!

There's nothing forcing programmers to use the newer, better API

The API just looks ugly. Who in the world wants a _v2 suffix? Terrible!

ugly. Who in the world wants a suffix? Terrible! Someone might accidentally use the old version of the function. Sure, it's well documented in the API docs to use the new one, but unlike changelogs, no one actually reads API docs. Even in a language like Haskell with a deprecation mechanism it wouldn't matter, since everyone just ignores warnings.

Obviously, the right decision was to create a new major version of sqlite (sqlite4), rename all of the functions, update the changelog, and force everyone to update their codebases. Why the author didn't see this is beyond me.

Dynamically typed languages

Let's say you go ahead and make a breaking change to a library in a dynamically typed language. Obviously all of your users should just read the changelog and update their code appropriately. There's no compiler to enforce things of course, so it's more likely that things will fail at runtime. That's fine, if you're using a dynamically typed language you deserve to have your code break.

Statically typed

The story with statically typed languages is—as always—better. There are two kinds of breaking changes we should discuss.

Changed type signature

Or more broadly: things that lead to a compiler error. I don't even understand why people talk about these. The compiler tells you exactly what you need to do. This is redundant information with the changelog! How dense can you be! Just try to compile your code and fix things. It couldn't be easier. I can't even right now.

Semantic change

Sometimes a function keeps its signature but changes its behavior, leading to code which will compile but behave differently. Sure, that's bad, but if you're too lazy to read the changelog and meticulously go through your codebase to see if you're affected in any way, you shouldn't be writing software.

Conclusion

I hope we can put this silly discussion to bed already. Break APIs! Not only does it lead to more beautiful libraries, but the forced breakage is good for the ecosystem. I hope the software engineering community can finally start to take responsibility for doing proper software maintenance.

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