Audit 2026-05-02 (Tâche 6 Phase A) had identified 3 inconsistent formats across the ADR corpus : - F1 list bullets : `* Status:` / `* Date:` / `* Deciders:` (11 ADRs) - F2 bold fields : `**Status:**` / `**Date:**` / `**Authors:**` (9 ADRs) - F3 dedicated section : `## Status\n**Value** ✅` (5 ADRs) Mixed metadata names (Authors / Deciders / Decision Date / Implementation Date / Implementation Status / Last Updated) and decorative emojis on status values made the corpus hard to scan or template against. Canonical format adopted (see adr/README.md for full template) : # NN. Title **Status:** <Proposed|Accepted|Implemented|Partially Implemented| Approved|Rejected|Deferred|Deprecated|Superseded by ADR-NNNN> **Date:** YYYY-MM-DD **Authors:** Name(s) [optional **Field:** ... lines] ## Context... Transformations applied (via /tmp/homogenize-adrs.py) : - F1 list bullets → bold fields - F2 cleanup : `**Deciders:**` → `**Authors:**`, strip status emojis - F3 sections : `## Status\n**Value** ✅` → `**Status:** Value` - Strip decorative emojis from `**Status:**` and `**Implementation Status:**` - Convert any `* Implementation Status:` / `* Last Updated:` / `* Decision Drivers:` / `* Decision Date:` to bold equivalents - Date typo fix : `2024-04-XX` → `2026-04-XX` for ADRs 0018, 0019 (already noted in PR #17 but here re-applied since branch starts from origin/main pre-PR17) - Normalize multiple blank lines after header (max 1) 21 / 23 ADRs modified. 0010 and 0012 were already conform. 0011 and 0014 do not exist in the repo (cf. README index update). Body content of each ADR is preserved unchanged. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Use Go 1.26.1 as the standard Go version
Status: Accepted Authors: Gabriel Radureau, AI Agent Date: 2026-04-01
Context and Problem Statement
We needed to choose a Go version for the dance-lessons-coach project that provides:
- Stability and long-term support
- Access to modern language features
- Good ecosystem compatibility
- Security updates
Decision Drivers
- Project requires modern Go features
- Need for good dependency compatibility
- Desire for long-term support
- Team familiarity with recent Go versions
Considered Options
- Go 1.25.x - Latest stable version at project start
- Go 1.26.1 - Newer version with additional features
- Go 1.24.x - More widely adopted but older
Decision Outcome
Chosen option: "Go 1.26.1" because it provides the best balance of modern features, stability, and ecosystem support.
Pros and Cons of the Options
Go 1.26.1
- Good, because provides access to latest language improvements
- Good, because includes recent security fixes
- Good, because has better performance optimizations
- Bad, because slightly less battle-tested than older versions
Go 1.25.x
- Good, because widely adopted
- Good, because very stable
- Bad, because missing some newer features
- Bad, because would need upgrade sooner
Go 1.24.x
- Good, because extremely stable
- Bad, because lacks modern features
- Bad, because security updates ending soon