> I appreciate that this is almost inexcusably trivial, but bear with me.
I say, let's put these hip state-of the art 4-color (or more!) displays finally to work! Slightly related, I once wrote up a script that would generate a graph of all XEP dependencies, and warn you about XEPs in draft state depending on XEPs in experimental state (and other relations that aren't allowed). The main flaw was that some XEPs refer to XEPs in sentences like "This XEP replaces XEP xxx", in which case the dependency *is* allowed. This could be solved by adding exceptions, or adding extra <replaces> sections to XEPs, ..., but I didn't really bother. Maybe a tool like that could also be an addition to our XEP consistency checking? cheers, Remko
