I just love the JRuby version string. I love it so much, I’m microblogging what each piece means.jruby 1.2.0 (ruby 1.8.6 patchlevel 287) (2009-01-29 rev 8947+3) [x86_64-java]Obviously “jruby 1.2.0” is the name of the impl and the version number. We’ll probably modify this to suffix “-dev” on trunk.“ruby 1.8.6 patchlevel 287” roughly identifies which release of Ruby the current mode is intended to be compatible with.“2009-01-29” is the date it was built.The revision number “8947+3” indicates the base SVN revision is 8947 and I’m three commits ahead of it on my local git-svn clone. If I were using straight-up SVN it would just show current revision. Once we move to git it will just show the current hash, plus possibly the hash of origin’s HEAD.And finally “x86_64-java” identifies the hardware and platform we report to Ruby programs.Now what I really like is what happens when you specify the –1.9 flag:jruby 1.2.0 (ruby 1.9.1 patchlevel 0) (2009-01-29 rev 8947+3) [x86_64-java]How cool is that? Java