Sasplanetnightly25011410738x647z Upd 99%

Option A: Portable update (recommended)

Option B: In-place update (riskier)

Let’s deconstruct the string into logical parts: sasplanetnightly25011410738x647z upd

| Component | Possible Meaning | |-----------|------------------| | sasplanet | Software name | | nightly | Indicates a development/nightly build | | 250114 | Date in YYMMDD format → January 14, 2025 (or possibly April 25, 2011? Unlikely) | | 10738 | Build number or SVN/Git commit hash prefix | | x647z | Possibly architecture flag (x64/32/z=zip) or internal build tag | | upd | User-added suffix meaning “update” (e.g., “I need an update for this version”) | Option A: Portable update (recommended)

Given the date 250114 = 14 Jan 2025, this string would refer to a nightly build from January 14, 2025. However, as of this writing (current date is early May 2026), that date is in the past but entirely plausible for a build from the SAS.Planet nightly pipeline. If you encountered this string in a log file, download manager, or forum post, it likely refers to a specific nightly version that may have been superseded. Option B: In-place update (riskier) Let’s deconstruct the

Cause: The SAS.Planet repository may have switched from SVN to Git, changing revision numbering.
Fix: Look for the closest build by date (250114). Nightly archives are often named by date rather than revision.