this post was submitted on 05 Nov 2024
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The claim wasn't that a code refactor is always a change in public interface, but that it could constitute a new major version. I listed two examples of when a major version should be incremented, the first being a change in a public interface, the second (erroneously) was a change in a private interface which I then clarified could only apply in the case of a more substantial code refactor, because as you pointed out (and I reiterated and agreed with), private interface changes don't necessitate breaking changes. It isn't an exclusive requirement that a public interface has breaking changes in order for the major version to be incremented, only that there be a new major version when that interface ~~breaks~~ introduces breaking changes.
I had to explain userchrome thoroughly in order to demonstrate that it is a public interface and differentiate it from the gui. I assumed it wasn't intuitive because you missed it when I provided it as an example initially and was accused of avoiding that point.
The first sentence of each paragraph addresses which point it argues other than the userchrome demonstration which follows from the prior paragraph and only addresses your userflow vs interface question in its conclusion.