View Source Compatibility and Deprecations
Elixir is versioned according to a vMAJOR.MINOR.PATCH schema.
Elixir is currently at major version v1. A new backwards compatible minor release happens every 6 months. Patch releases are not scheduled and are made whenever there are bug fixes or security patches.
Elixir applies bug fixes only to the latest minor branch. Security patches are available for the last 5 minor branches:
Elixir version | Support |
---|---|
1.12 | Bug fixes and security patches |
1.11 | Security patches only |
1.10 | Security patches only |
1.9 | Security patches only |
1.8 | Security patches only |
1.7 | Security patches only |
New releases are announced in the read-only announcements mailing list. All security releases will be tagged with [security]
.
There are currently no plans for a major v2 release.
Compatibility between non-major Elixir versions
Elixir minor and patch releases are backwards compatible: well-defined behaviours and documented APIs in a given version will continue working on future versions.
Although we expect the vast majority of programs to remain compatible over time, it is impossible to guarantee that no future change will break any program. Under some unlikely circumstances, we may introduce changes that break existing code:
Security: a security issue in the implementation may arise whose resolution requires backwards incompatible changes. We reserve the right to address such security issues.
Bugs: if an API has undesired behaviour, a program that depends on the buggy behaviour may break if the bug is fixed. We reserve the right to fix such bugs.
Compiler front-end: improvements may be done to the compiler, introducing new warnings for ambiguous modes and providing more detailed error messages. Those can lead to compilation errors (when running with
--warning-as-errors
) or tooling failures when asserting on specific error messages (although one should avoid such). We reserve the right to do such improvements.Imports: new functions may be added to the
Kernel
module, which is auto-imported. They may collide with local functions defined in your modules. Collisions can be resolved in a backwards compatible fashion usingimport Kernel, except: [...]
with a list of all functions you don't want to be imported fromKernel
. We reserve the right to do such additions.
In order to continue evolving the language without introducing breaking changes, Elixir will rely on deprecations to demote certain practices and promote new ones. Our deprecation policy is outlined in the "Deprecations" section.
The only exception to the compatibility guarantees above are experimental features, which will be explicitly marked as such, and do not provide any compatibility guarantee until they are stabilized.
Compatibility between Elixir and Erlang/OTP
Erlang/OTP versioning is independent from the versioning of Elixir. Each version of Elixir supports a specific range of Erlang/OTP versions. The compatibility table is shown below.
Elixir version | Supported Erlang/OTP versions |
---|---|
1.12 | 21 - 24 |
1.11 | 21 - 23 |
1.10 | 21 - 22 (and Erlang/OTP 23 from v1.10.3) |
1.9 | 20 - 22 |
1.8 | 20 - 22 |
1.7 | 19 - 22 |
1.6 | 19 - 20 (and Erlang/OTP 21 from v1.6.6) |
1.5 | 18 - 20 |
1.4 | 18 - 19 (and Erlang/OTP 20 from v1.4.5) |
1.3 | 18 - 19 |
1.2 | 18 - 18 (and Erlang/OTP 19 from v1.2.6) |
1.1 | 17 - 18 |
1.0 | 17 - 17 (and Erlang/OTP 18 from v1.0.5) |
While Elixir often adds compatibility to new Erlang/OTP versions on released branches, such as support for Erlang/OTP 20 in v1.4.5, those releases usually contain the minimum changes for Elixir to run without errors. Only the next minor release, in this case v1.5.0, does effectively leverage the new features provided by the latest Erlang/OTP release.
Deprecations
Policy
Elixir deprecations happen in 3 steps:
The feature is soft-deprecated. It means both CHANGELOG and documentation must list the feature as deprecated but no warning is effectively emitted by running the code. There is no requirement to soft-deprecate a feature.
The feature is effectively deprecated by emitting warnings on usage. This is also known as hard-deprecation. In order to deprecate a feature, the proposed alternative MUST exist for AT LEAST THREE minor versions. For example,
Enum.uniq/2
was soft-deprecated in favor ofEnum.uniq_by/2
in Elixir v1.1. This means a deprecation warning may only be emitted by Elixir v1.4 or later.The feature is removed. This can only happen on major releases. This means deprecated features in Elixir v1.x shall only be removed by Elixir v2.x.
Table of deprecations
The first column is the version the feature was hard deprecated. The second column shortly describes the deprecated feature and the third column explains the replacement and from which the version the replacement is available from.
Version | Deprecated feature | Replaced by (available since) |
---|---|---|
v1.12 | ^^^/2 | Use bxor/2 instead (v1.0) |
v1.12 | @foo() to read module attributes | Remove the parenthesis (v1.0) |
v1.12 | use EEx.Engine | Explicitly delegate to EEx.Engine instead (v1.0) |
v1.12 | :xref compiler in Mix | Nothing (it always runs as part of the compiler now) |
v1.11 | Mix.Project.compile/2 | Mix.Task.run("compile", args) (v1.0) |
v1.11 | Supervisor.Spec.worker/3 and Supervisor.Spec.supervisor/3 | The new child specs outlined in Supervisor (v1.5) |
v1.11 | Supervisor.start_child/2 and Supervisor.terminate_child/2 | DynamicSupervisor (v1.6) |
v1.11 | System.stacktrace/1 | __STACKTRACE__ in try/catch/rescue (v1.7) |
v1.10 | Code.ensure_compiled?/1 | Code.ensure_compiled/1 (v1.0) |
v1.10 | Code.load_file/2 | Code.require_file/2 (v1.0) or Code.compile_file/2 (v1.7) |
v1.10 | Code.loaded_files/0 | Code.required_files/0 (v1.7) |
v1.10 | Code.unload_file/1 | Code.unrequire_files/1 (v1.7) |
v1.10 | Passing non-chardata to Logger.log/2 | Explicitly convert to string with to_string/1 (v1.0) |
v1.10 | :compile_time_purge_level in Logger app environment | :compile_time_purge_matching in Logger app environment (v1.7) |
v1.10 | Supervisor.Spec.supervise/2 | The new child specs outlined in Supervisor (v1.5) |
v1.10 | :simple_one_for_one strategy in Supervisor | DynamicSupervisor (v1.6) |
v1.10 | :restart and :shutdown in Task.Supervisor.start_link/1 | :restart and :shutdown in Task.Supervisor.start_child/3 (v1.6) |
v1.9 | Enumerable keys in Map.drop/2 , Map.split/2 , and Map.take/2 | Call Enum.to_list/1 on the second argument before hand (v1.0) |
v1.9 | Mix.Project.load_paths/1 | Mix.Project.compile_path/1 (v1.0) |
v1.9 | Passing :insert_replaced to String.replace/4 | Use :binary.replace/4 (v1.0) |
v1.8 | Passing a non-empty list to Collectable.into/1 | Kernel.++/2 or Keyword.merge/2 (v1.0) |
v1.8 | Passing a non-empty list to :into in for | Kernel.++/2 or Keyword.merge/2 (v1.0) |
v1.8 | Passing a non-empty list to Enum.into/2 | Kernel.++/2 or Keyword.merge/2 (v1.0) |
v1.8 | Time units in its plural form, such as: :seconds , :milliseconds , and the like | Use the singular form, such as: :second , :millisecond , and so on (v1.4) |
v1.8 | Inspect.Algebra.surround/3 | Inspect.Algebra.concat/2 and Inspect.Algebra.nest/2 (v1.0) |
v1.8 | Inspect.Algebra.surround_many/6 | Inspect.Algebra.container_doc/6 (v1.6) |
v1.9 | --detached in Kernel.CLI | --erl "-detached" (v1.0) |
v1.8 | Kernel.ParallelCompiler.files/2 | Kernel.ParallelCompiler.compile/2 (v1.6) |
v1.8 | Kernel.ParallelCompiler.files_to_path/2 | Kernel.ParallelCompiler.compile_to_path/2 (v1.6) |
v1.8 | Kernel.ParallelRequire.files/2 | Kernel.ParallelCompiler.require/2 (v1.6) |
v1.8 | Returning {:ok, contents} or :error from Mix.Compilers.Erlang.compile/6 's callback | Return {:ok, contents, warnings} or {:error, errors, warnings} (v1.6) |
v1.8 | System.cwd/0 and System.cwd!/0 | File.cwd/0 and File.cwd!/0 (v1.0) |
v1.7 | Code.get_docs/2 | Code.fetch_docs/1 (v1.7) |
v1.7 | Enum.chunk/2,3,4 | Enum.chunk_every/2 and Enum.chunk_every/3,4 (v1.5) |
v1.7 | Calling super/1 inGenServer callbacks | Implementing the behaviour explicitly without calling super/1 (v1.0) |
v1.7 | not left in right | left not in right (v1.5) |
v1.7 | Registry.start_link/3 | Registry.start_link/1 (v1.5) |
v1.7 | Stream.chunk/2,3,4 | Stream.chunk_every/2 and Stream.chunk_every/3,4 (v1.5) |
v1.6 | Enum.partition/2 | Enum.split_with/2 (v1.4) |
v1.6 | Macro.unescape_tokens/1,2 | Use Enum.map/2 to traverse over the arguments (v1.0) |
v1.6 | Module.add_doc/6 | @doc module attribute (v1.0) |
v1.6 | Range.range?/1 | Pattern match on _.._ (v1.0) |
v1.5 | () to mean nil | nil (v1.0) |
v1.5 | char_list/0 type | charlist/0 type (v1.3) |
v1.5 | Atom.to_char_list/1 | Atom.to_charlist/1 (v1.3) |
v1.5 | Enum.filter_map/3 | Enum.filter/2 + Enum.map/2 or for comprehensions (v1.0) |
v1.5 | Float.to_char_list/1 | Float.to_charlist/1 (v1.3) |
v1.5 | GenEvent module | Supervisor and GenServer (v1.0);<br/>GenStage (v1.3);<br/>:gen_event (Erlang/OTP 17) |
v1.5 | <%= in middle and end expressions in EEx | Use <% (<%= is allowed only in start expressions) (v1.0) |
v1.5 | :as_char_lists value in Inspect.Opts.t/0 type | :as_charlists value (v1.3) |
v1.5 | :char_lists key in Inspect.Opts.t/0 type | :charlists key (v1.3) |
v1.5 | Integer.to_char_list/1,2 | Integer.to_charlist/1 and Integer.to_charlist/2 (v1.3) |
v1.5 | Kernel.to_char_list/1 | Kernel.to_charlist/1 (v1.3) |
v1.5 | List.Chars.to_char_list/1 | List.Chars.to_charlist/1 (v1.3) |
v1.5 | @compile {:parse_transform, _} in Module | None |
v1.5 | Stream.filter_map/3 | Stream.filter/2 + Stream.map/2 (v1.0) |
v1.5 | String.ljust/3 and String.rjust/3 | Use String.pad_leading/3 and String.pad_trailing/3 with a binary padding (v1.3) |
v1.5 | String.lstrip/1 and String.rstrip/1 | String.trim_leading/1 and String.trim_trailing/1 (v1.3) |
v1.5 | String.lstrip/2 and String.rstrip/2 | Use String.trim_leading/2 and String.trim_trailing/2 with a binary as second argument (v1.3) |
v1.5 | String.strip/1 and String.strip/2 | String.trim/1 and String.trim/2 (v1.3) |
v1.5 | String.to_char_list/1 | String.to_charlist/1 (v1.3) |
v1.4 | Anonymous functions with no expression after -> | Use an expression or explicitly return nil (v1.0) |
v1.4 | Support for making private functions overridable | Use public functions (v1.0) |
v1.4 | Variable used as function call | Use parentheses (v1.0) |
v1.4 | Access.key/1 | Access.key/2 (v1.3) |
v1.4 | Behaviour module | @callback module attribute (v1.0) |
v1.4 | Enum.uniq/2 | Enum.uniq_by/2 (v1.2) |
v1.4 | Float.to_char_list/2 | :erlang.float_to_list/2 (Erlang/OTP 17) |
v1.4 | Float.to_string/2 | :erlang.float_to_binary/2 (Erlang/OTP 17) |
v1.4 | HashDict module | Map (v1.2) |
v1.4 | HashSet module | MapSet (v1.1) |
v1.4 | IEx.Helpers.import_file/2 | IEx.Helpers.import_file_if_available/1 (v1.3) |
v1.4 | Mix.Utils.camelize/1 | Macro.camelize/1 (v1.2) |
v1.4 | Mix.Utils.underscore/1 | Macro.underscore/1 (v1.2) |
v1.4 | Multi-letter aliases in OptionParser | Use single-letter aliases (v1.0) |
v1.4 | Set module | MapSet (v1.1) |
v1.4 | Stream.uniq/2 | Stream.uniq_by/2 (v1.2) |
v1.3 | \x{X*} inside strings/sigils/charlists | \uXXXX or \u{X*} (v1.1) |
v1.3 | Dict module | Keyword (v1.0) or Map (v1.2) |
v1.3 | :append_first option in Kernel.defdelegate/2 | Define the function explicitly (v1.0) |
v1.3 | Map/dictionary as 2nd argument in Enum.group_by/3 | Enum.reduce/3 (v1.0) |
v1.3 | Keyword.size/1 | Kernel.length/1 (v1.0) |
v1.3 | Map.size/1 | Kernel.map_size/1 (v1.0) |
v1.3 | /r option in Regex | /U (v1.1) |
v1.3 | Set behaviour | MapSet data structure (v1.1) |
v1.3 | String.valid_character?/1 | String.valid?/1 (v1.0) |
v1.3 | Task.find/2 | Use direct message matching (v1.0) |
v1.3 | Non-map as 2nd argument in URI.decode_query/2 | Use a map (v1.0) |
v1.2 | Dict behaviour | MapSet data structure (v1.1) |
v1.1 | ?\xHEX | 0xHEX (v1.0) |
v1.1 | Access protocol | Access behaviour (v1.1) |
v1.1 | as: true | false in alias/2 and require/2 | None |