Dear Scott, Sorry for not answering the first time you asked. I thought someone else would give you some feedback but I guess no one did it off-list.
How is this specific palette different from other palettes existing on CRAN or Bioconductor? What makes this specific palette better for Bioconductor packages (as opposed to CRAN packages)? How does the repository or the package benefit from being together with the other cohort of packages? I think as a color palette is quite general purpose and doesn't require much maintenance, your package might be better suited for CRAN. There you can release one and if the checks pass you won't be required to update it anymore. Best wishes, Lluís Revilla On Tue, 20 May 2025 at 18:20, Scott McLoud via Bioc-devel < bioc-devel@r-project.org> wrote: > Hello, > > I'm a graduate student working on preparing the R package "microshades" > for submission to BioConductor. > > Microshades is an R package designed to provide custom color shading > palettes that improve accessibility and data organization. > > My question is, does this fulfill BioConductor's requirements of > addressing areas of high-throughput genomic analysis? > > The GitHub page for the R package can be found here: > https://github.com/KarstensLab/microshades > > Scott > > > > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] > > _______________________________________________ > Bioc-devel@r-project.org mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioc-devel > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] _______________________________________________ Bioc-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioc-devel