Hi Krutik,

You are looking at the "problem" from a wrong angle. If there are no any 
reasons raised by your PhD funding body to keep your repository closed, it's of 
your own benefit to have all the code public:


a) There is chance that someone else in the world is working on something very 
similar. Having an open repository with full development history  is very good 
way to show publishers, thesis committee, collaborators, your future employers  
or even enemies that you  have been working on the idea for a while;


b) There is chance that instead of writing their own tools on similar approach 
you are developing other researchers will want to contribute to your open 
project. Thus making you package more versatile and competitive.


Best Regards,

Andris

________________________________
From: Bioc-devel <bioc-devel-boun...@r-project.org> on behalf of Krutik Patel 
(PGR) <k.pat...@newcastle.ac.uk>
Sent: 14 January 2020 10:49:49
To: bioc-devel@r-project.org
Subject: [Bioc-devel] Question about github repo

Hi Bioconductor dev team,

I am ready to submit my first package to bioconductor. It is currently on a 
private github and I wish to start the process of submission. Do I need to make 
my github repo public prior to sending it to the bioconductor contributions 
github repo. I understand that the code and concept of my project needs to be 
made public, but I have just had some worries about individuals potentially 
scooping my work while it is made public. This package is part of my PhD so I 
am perhaps a bit paranoid about this. Apologies if this was a bit of a silly 
question. Hope to hear back soon.

Kind Regards,
Krutik Patel

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