I think it depends quite a lot on the type of project you're working
on that decides (for you) what kind of things you use. E.g. for an
application/cms I see myself using Mask, HtmlTable, Lang, Date, URI
(from Oskar's list) and other times I'm using Fx and Position type
stuff. So.. you should probably ask 200 people first to make a top 10
list before you can really say what can and what can't be dropped
imho.

It's up to the downloader as well either just clicking "select all"
for -core and/or -more that starting working with Moo even if you have
stuff you don't use. If it's too many kb's, someone eventually can or
will come back and create a new download with only the stuff they need
for that particular project. And if they don't, that's fine too, it's
not like that is the responsibility of MooTools.

My idea of -more is/was that it should provide a set of extras on top
of core that could be considered basic necessities to start building
regular website of application like stuff instantly. (I think the
MooScroller could fit into that category as plenty of people look for
something like this "as soon as" they create overflowing divs with a
scroller.)
If you're looking for extra functionality, other ways of doing it,
improved/enhanced versions, etc. you can checkout the Forge (which you
should do anyway!). Maybe some Forge plugins could actually be moved
into -more over time. E.g. something that has to do with storage or a
smart Validator extension, or extras like Loop or simpleDelay, or...
hmm this could turn into a problem! ;)

You can promote Forge more if you drop -more, move everything to the
Forge and create a page where you can click like a set to download.
Like "This is what More would have been" and then it would collect all
plugins that were previously in -more. These could be marked with some
"Original Moo Dev Team plugin" so you kinda know what to expect, which
I think is good for newcomers and hell, everyone else too really.

As far as promoting the Forge and stuff on it would be a monthly blog
post with a list of tested and highlighted plugins. Like David Walsh
is doing every now and then, but focussing on Forge and what More Dev
Team members consider interesting. These could be really simple string
enhancing methods or some Class extension so it wouldn't take too much
time, but I fully understand nobody really has time :) Maybe just a
month blog post with 10 or less randomly selected added plugins from
the last month (if there are more, just add a link to Forge). No
review, just the names + short description entered by the uploader to
get the word out. Good for newcomers, good for ppl not visiting Forge
every week, good for other sites that pick up the blog. An editor
could verify if some plugins aren't really suitable to add etc. this
is trivial.

/end Forge rant

Hmm, I think leaving everything as is will be fine until 2012 ;)




On Sep 26, 9:54 am, אריה גלזר <[email protected]> wrote:
> you can always get statistics from the more builder....
>
> On Sun, Sep 26, 2010 at 2:28 AM, Christoph Pojer
> <[email protected]>wrote:
>
> > btw. just saying that the docs do not (just) reflect the usage but
> > also the complexity of such plugins. So a more complex plugin might
> > get more hits on the docs than a less complex one.
>
> --
> Arieh Glazer
> אריה גלזר
> 052-5348-561
> 5561

Reply via email to