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by ddevault
2245 days ago
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This was 3 years ago. I usually treat these issues a bit better these days. However... I disagree with your suggestions about how to go about this better. You're still coming from a place where all paths lead to the implementation and inclusion of the feature. We will say "no" sometimes, and there's no amount of discussion which is going to change that. We're volunteers with a limited amount of time, why should we lead everyone on by entertaining a fruitless discussion in on a feature for which we have no interest in supporting? There's a lot of discussion you don't see, too. Discussion on the IRC channel, private discussions between maintainers, snippets here and there on patch reviews and other issues... just because you didn't get your say, doesn't mean that the issue wasn't sufficiently discussed. At some point I just don't want to discuss it any more. I could redirect you to /dev/null and let you say your fill, but I don't think that's fair to you, either. You can't always get what you want, and if I don't always give you what you want, that doesn't make me a bad maintainer IMO. |
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Not really. Ideally, I'd have read a comment saying: "We discussed this on IRC, and for this and that reason, we decided that this is probably never going to be worth doing. If you have any new information or argument that was not considered above, please do raise it with us, but we are closing this issue for now."
> There's a lot of discussion you don't see, too. Discussion on the IRC channel, private discussions between maintainers, snippets here and there on patch reviews and other issues... just because you didn't get your say, doesn't mean that the issue wasn't sufficiently discussed.
If your discussions don't happen in the open, how open is your open source project really?
You can discuss things on IRC, or whatsapp, or wherever you want, but if a synchronous and/or private communication channel is used to decide on technical issues that impact the project, then you are essentially excluding everyone that doesn't live in your same time-zone, wasn't there on IRC at that time, can't search those IRC logs, wasn't invited in the room, etc. from impacting your project.
That's just not open enough for me, so I don't contribute to projects that work like that.
Rust or th linux kernel discuss everything in the open, so that everyone can see it and participate, whenever they have time to, and make their case. Whether that's a mailing list, a forum, or a github issue doesn't matter.
But closing an issue with "no" isn't very helpful for all those users that weren't in the room where that was decided, and they will all wonder "why".
> that doesn't make me a bad maintainer IMO.
There are dozens of different ways of maintaining open source projects. Just because sway's way doesn't fit me doesn't mean it's bad. It just means that it doesn't fit me. If you'd like to change something so that it fits people like me, the above hopefully explains what the issues for me were. But I don't expect you to do that, and you don't have to do that, and its perfectly fine for you to disagree and don't want to do that.