When I complain about a change I consider two possibilities:
1. It was not intended to have the resultant effect.
2. There was a good reason for it, f.ex removing another bug.
Unless things get really serious, I am not going to come back with the
same complaint. That does not mean that I liked the changed behaviour.
If I'm pissed off I try not to show it (except on Fridays).
Merci Jean-Marc
Garst 

Jean-Marc Lasgouttes wrote:
> 
> Lars Gullik Bj�nnes wrote:
> > | ERT inset, removal of latex environment, removal of dirty tricks
> > | (spacing around tables, automatic centering of figures, setting the
> > | layout to caption when creating a float...), removal of 'space at end of
> > | math formula inserts a space in main text). People did rely on these
> > | sometimes broken) behaviours. And then there are the changes in UI that
> > | we do not reflect in docs.
> >
> > I never saw the "lot of [pissed off] people"... I noticed some minor
> > annoyed people that quickly got used to the new way. And when they
> > didn't go away quickly we made amends.
> 
> You seem to be very effective at just not seeing people's complaints.
> Just because people do not reiterate their complaints mean that they are
> happy with the change. Just that they think that any level of
> complaining will not change anything.
> 
> JMarc

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