Nicolas Goaziou writes:
I don't have strong opinions on this issue.
I read it otherwise.
So do I.
Some history. When I worked on this project several years ago, I
concluded that Bastien was hostile to it, but there was nothing in
his communication that was particularly negative. When I
suggested on the list recently that Bastien did not like the
project, I was scolded a bit by others who found mildly supportive
statements from him in the archives. Yesterday, in Bastien's
response to Glenn Morris, was the first time I read that he
thought the project was a "bad idea". I wish I'd known that at
the time!
I'm fine with Bastien holding an opinion different from mine. My
point is that he did not speak his mind when I worked on the
project, so it is valid today to disagree with his statement about
the strength of his opinions.
Do you agree with the one I suggested?
I disagree. My motivation is not to attract more contributors. I
don't
think this was Thomas and Jonathan's motivation when they
started the
project either, but I may be wrong.
I can only speak for myself here. At the time, I thought the Org
manual was a stylistic mess and I thought I could use my
experience as a writer and editor to improve the situation. I had
lots of experience writing in LaTeX, but found texinfo clunky and
obtrusive. When I discovered Jonathan's texinfo exporter and
found that it worked nicely, I thought I had an opportunity to
contribute two ways to Org: 1) I could create a document that
would challenge the texinfo exporter and lead to its development
and improvement, and 2) I could edit the manual using the same
lightweight markup language that I was now using in my academic
work, having switched from LaTeX to Org mode for its reproducible
research capabilities.
Of course, I figured the Org mode developers who write the manual
would also appreciate the switch, and was pleased that Carsten
pitched in with the memorable comment about Org eating its own dog
food.
Many thanks to Nicolas for his efforts on this project.
All the best,
Tom
--
Thomas S. Dye
http://www.tsdye.com