> That's useful from a user perspective. Or is it? It's useful from a > user perspective, until that issue is fixed. Then what? Is it still > useful? Can the commenter remove it?
Yes. > Can they get notified it's changed? Yes. > Can the maintainer say "this is fixed/changed?" Yes. > I never look at the PyPI pages for stuff I create. Which means if > someone is using it for support, they're wasting their time. (Why > would I look at it? I know what the project is for and where to get > it! :) (and also PyPI isn't the prime download for it either - so the > download stats are irrelevant to me) I doubt I'm alone, so how many > people's time are wasted asking questions there ? You'll get an email when someone comments, so you don't have to look at the page. > I suppose, personally, I'm dubious about the idea of having unchanging > comments and ratings associated with projects which are changing and > improving - that feels like a mismatch. That's why the comments are per-release. > If there's interest, and if there's a survey to be done, I could > forward a link to a survey through that twitterfeed - which I suspect > is a mix of users of PyPI and uploaders to PyPI. Feel free to annouce it on Twitter - I don't use that system myself. Regards, Martin _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com