On Sat, Oct 29, 2011 at 5:45 PM, Brian Curtin <[email protected]> wrote: > On Sat, Oct 29, 2011 at 05:13, anatoly techtonik <[email protected]> wrote: >> FWIW, we are all developers and it's strange that people send reports >> instead of patches. Something is wrong here. I suspect it is >> insufficient exposure of source code running the site. There is a >> Code-In coming - it might be a good idea to suggest improvements in >> this area for the challenge. > > Not everyone has the time or interest to submit patches. I *know* you > know this, as we've interacted on mailing lists and the bug tracker > for a while now.
Merely repeating the fact won't help it. The root cause is not 'not everyone has time', but 'not everyone has _that much_ time'. This is how that time is spent: 1. Discover the source code for the site 2. Discover the thing that is wrong 3. Find a way how to fix the thing 4. Submit the patch I would like to propose (to PSF, probably) - the following study. Fetch people running outside in a corridor and ask them to change something on the website. Then measure the time they spent trying to figure out how to do this without asking questions. I guess more than half of them will give up at point 1. > However a person wants to notify us of an issue is better than not > notifying us at all. That's true. I wonder if the percentage of those who do this is below 0.1%, because some issues were reported only by subscribers of this list and even me - who doesn't visit Python website very often? =) Anyway, if there are any people interested in helping with an editor for static files, I can prepare a more detailed Roadmap/Outline that can be useful for Code-In or Jesse's sprints. http://code.google.com/p/pydotorg/issues/detail?id=6 But I need somebody to ping me periodically, or I lose the motivation. -- anatoly t. _______________________________________________ pydotorg-www mailing list [email protected] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pydotorg-www
