Hey look, I'm listed at the top of the list.. 8-)

I did submit a pull request for that one..

FYI.

-brad w.

On Fri, Jun 14, 2019 at 6:22 PM Eric Bresie <[email protected]> wrote:

> Some of the warnings may be covered by one of these tickets
>
>
> https://issues.apache.org/jira/issues/?jql=text%20~%20%22Warnings%22%20AND%20project%20%3D%20NetBeans%20and%20status%20!%3D%20Closed
>
> Eric Bresie
> [email protected]
> > On June 13, 2019 at 11:44:19 AM CDT, Brad Walker <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> > Hey Ken,
> >
> > The build warnings drive me nuts. So I've been working on cleaning them
> up
> > "here and there" as I can.
> >
> > I can say a lot of the build warnings could be fixed with some easy work.
> > Many of the build warnings do require some thought to fixing them.
> >
> > My experience is that cleaning up build warnings is a great student
> > project. The students would be able to hone their skills in Java and also
> > to give some technical thought on how to prioritize items for fixing.
> Also,
> > they would learn how to deal with a large software application. Many of
> the
> > warnings will require some technical thought but should be easy for a
> > college student to tackle.
> >
> > If your students would "freak out" over the build warnings, this is a
> good
> > time for them to also grow as engineers. I've worked on a lot of projects
> > professionally where there are a many warnings for various valid,
> technical
> > reasons.
> >
> > Hope my comments help.
> >
> > -brad w.
> >
> > On Thu, Jun 13, 2019 at 10:28 AM Kenneth Fogel <
> [email protected]>
> > wrote:
> >
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > I am building NB from the current code in the repository. Its about a
> half
> > > hour job on my Windows machine and is going on while I type this. I am
> > > curious about the numerous build warnings. There are thousands. I know
> if I
> > > gave my students code to build and there were numerous warnings they
> would
> > > freak out. I know I can ignore them but is there not a process to
> slowly
> > > clean these up? I understand that fixing this is risky and many of the
> > > warnings are compiler based such as "unchecked" or "deprecated". I just
> > > want to learn more about how major projects are maintained over time.
> > >
> > > Ken
> > >
>

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