Hi, You can submit it as non-experimental right away, if you think it is already mature enough. I think this flag is self-declared - up to the developer to decide. Paolo, who checks new plugins may suggest to the plugin author to mark it as experimental if he thinks it is not yet mature enough.
Reasons for experimental: - still under early development (initial version) - may fail in a lot of cases (unsuitable for production use) - no documentation at all - not obvious for the user how to use it It looks like a very nice plugin - thank you for developing and submitting it! Definitely useful for people doing time analysis. I will recommend it to my local police, who already is doing crime analysis with QGIS. Greetings, Andreas On 2016-07-20 16:22, C Hamilton wrote: > I am planning on submitting a new D3 plugin to the QGIS plugins repo. This > generates a circular heatmap D3 web page that has some similarities to the > ArcGIS data clock. This is the github link. > > https://github.com/NationalSecurityAgency/qgis-d3datavis-plugin > > I have done a write up that shows what it does. The question that I have is > when should a plugin be marked experimental? Are their advantages in marking > it experimental? I think what I have done so far is fairly solid and the only > changes will be to improve upon it and perhaps add some other charts. > > I would appreciate your thoughts before I submit the plugin. > > Thanks, > > Calvin > _______________________________________________ > Qgis-developer mailing list > [email protected] > List info: http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-developer > Unsubscribe: http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-developer
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