Hi Alecs,
yes there are many tickets with patches. But let me assure you that
valid easy patches have been applied within days. Those left over are
debatable, possible invalid, bad design or just not working patches.
Documentation patches tend to be inclomplete, as you should check
other languages and other versions (currently 3 symfony versions * 2
orms * 1-10 languages = plenty of docs)
There are many tickets which say: oh just add this here and then MY case works.
But thats not how we can develop a framework.

I think you will understand when you take a deeper look at the patches.

Fabian

On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 9:54 AM, Alexandru-Emil Lupu
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Ok.
> Sorry for my late response. I am in as well, as i was one (or the one)
> who told that there are too many tickets.
> I would consider that one of the first must be the tickets that have a
> patch assigned. This way would be easier to decrease the number (240
> tickets in a row). Of course, not all the patches are  for the core,
> and also ... not all the patches are valid.
>
> Alecs
>

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