On 2012-04-01, Minh Nguyen <mvngu.n...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi folks, > > It is a fact universally acknowledged that an open source developer > with an idea is in need of a way to effectively implement the idea. > Distributed version control systems such as Mercurial, Git, etc. form > the early stage in the evolution of processes of software development. > The major idea of this first stage is forking. That is, you see > something wrong with a piece of code or you want to improve something. > What you would do is fork the code by creating your own working > repository. This is all well and good. > > But is there another way to improve our habits of software > development? I believe yes. The latest craze that has swept the open > source world by hurricane... err... storm is spooning. To understand > what spooning is, have a look at the tutorial video at > > https://bitbucket.org/spooning/
not in Singapore :( The concern about potentially negative impact on highly cherished family values would be too great... However, a variation, spoon-feeding, is very well ingrained in the culture here, and I would propose Sage's spoon_feed() tool to be developed, which would allow one to upload Sage coding skills directly into the brain, avoiding the usual inconveniencies of having to do some real (home)work in order to master something. Maybe I should cross-post it to sage-edu... > > There, you will learn about spooning by watching other developers > spooning. I want to propose that we adopt spooning as part of our > development process. I vote in favour. Please cast your vote below. > > [] Yes, I want spooning to be part of the Sage development process. > > [] No, thank you. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. > > -- > Regards, > Minh Van Nguyen > http://boxen.math.washington.edu/home/mvngu/ > -- To post to this group, send an email to sage-devel@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to sage-devel+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/sage-devel URL: http://www.sagemath.org