What do you want to see for a mature DLang?

Iain Buclaw ibuclaw at gdcproject.org
Sun Dec 31 02:06:03 UTC 2017


On 31 December 2017 at 02:07, codephantom via Digitalmars-d
<digitalmars-d at puremagic.com> wrote:
> On Saturday, 30 December 2017 at 16:36:57 UTC, Iain Buclaw wrote:
>>
>>
>> All open issues are actionable, and require some action.  They are not
>> noise, and many issues whose fix requires a change in language specification
>> or semantics are understandably left to the few who have the authoritative
>> to make such final decisions on whether it should be accepted or rejected.
>>
>> Age of issue is not a big deal.  In fact I see it as a good sign that at
>> least issues are left to breathe while we wait and understand the impact or
>> urgency of it.  As opposed to jumping in and fixing issues immediately
>> without taking due diligence on the wider picture it affects.
>
>
> Is this a problem with triage?
>
> i.e. like a hositpital emergency ward chaos rules, cause nobody is on duty
> triaging.
>
> How does a contributor prioritise their contribution to items in bugzilla?
>

Either:
1. By picking up an issue that you have a vested interest in seeing fixed.

2. Feel free to look at the list of regressons.
    https://issues.dlang.org/buglist.cgi?bug_severity=regression&component=dmd&list_id=218477&query_format=advanced&resolution=---

Bigger projects or features are delegated between the core
maintainers, or if a champion comes to take the reigns, then they have
the freedom to go ahead.  For everything else, it is pretty much a
free-for-all in terms of what you want to get fixed.  Almost nobody is
being paid to contribute to the language here.


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