OK, I put a section at the top saying that, and then summarizing the process for people who are familiar with the tools. I also updated the last list to say that you should add a link to the rendered version and how to do it.
On Tue, Oct 4, 2016 at 8:40 AM, David Luposchainsky via Haskell-prime < haskell-prime@haskell.org> wrote: > On 04.10.2016 01:27, Iavor Diatchki wrote: > > During our Haskell Prime lunch meeting at ICFP, I promised to create a > detailed > > step-by-step guide for creating Haskell Prime proposals on GitHub. The > > instructions are now available here: > > > > https://github.com/yav/rfcs/blob/instructions/step-by- > step-instructions.md > > > > Please have a look and let me know if something is unclear, or if I > misunderstood > > something about the process. > > The target audience for this document is someone who is unfamiliar with > Git and > Github, which we should make clear at the beginning. As an experienced > user, it > left me searching for relevant information among all those sub-lists to > find out > that it really just is about opening a pull request containing a template. > We > might provide a link to the document in the process section [1] of the > current > README if others think this amount of detail helps lowering the barrier of > entry. > > One thing we should also mention somewhere is to please provide a link to > the > rendered version of the proposal in the ticket, because Git diffs are in a > very > reader-unfriendly format. > > Greetings, > David > > [1]: https://github.com/yav/rfcs/tree/instructions#proposal-process > > > -- > My GPG keys: https://keybase.io/quchen > _______________________________________________ > Haskell-prime mailing list > Haskell-prime@haskell.org > http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell-prime >
_______________________________________________ Haskell-prime mailing list Haskell-prime@haskell.org http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell-prime