Trust me, I was not offended by your request, more "surprised" and somewhat
"so what do you want from us". And maybe I should have dug up
http://www.openhub.com that provides these kind of metrics, and I know of
one other effort as well, but can't find the link (possibly not public yet).
I am just
Hi Niclas,
I’m not sure I wanted anyone to jump up and down as If I discovered water on
Mars ☺. This is not a new concept or idea. I simply haven’t seen it being
published and thought it would be a nice thing.
Of course, just because I haven’t seen it, doesn’t make it innovative and, of
cour
On 14/11/2016 00:52, Niclas Hedhman wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 4:58 AM, Sharan Foga wrote:
>
>> *General Diversity Approach and Strategy*
>> I haven't had much time to update this on the wiki but once the committer
>> survey is complete I will be able to perhaps tailor it based on the result
Thanks Niclas,
Openhub has most of what I was thinking. It’s a case of not knowing what was
out there. Thanks so much for the link. There is a little more I would like
to see with this. But this is a big help.Now, I know that it can & has
been done, I can add what I need or use as is.
Alfred Webber wrote on 11/14/16 3:31 PM:
> Thanks Niclas,
>
> Openhub has most of what I was thinking. It’s a case of not knowing
> what was out there. Thanks so much for the link. There is a little
> more I would like to see with this. But this is a big help.Now,
> I know that it can &
Switching from Asciidoc to OpenOffice seems like a recipe for disaster to me.
Asciidoc (or asciidoctor) is very capable for PDF creation and is used in
publishing companies like OReilly.
And as you mentioned you can use your version control system nicely. With
OpenOffice you would loose the ab
Le 14/11/16 à 19:10, Manfred Moser a écrit :
> Switching from Asciidoc to OpenOffice seems like a recipe for disaster to me.
> Asciidoc (or asciidoctor) is very capable for PDF creation and is used in
> publishing companies like OReilly.
On my side I used at different time OpenOffice, Asciidoc,
I have used all those as well and my preference still sits with asciidoc.
Mostly because I have a larger choice of quality output.
If I have the choice overall and write more complex stuff on my own I would
probably go back to LaTeX ;-)
manfred
Martin Desruisseaux wrote on 2016-11-14 11:16:
I took a leave of absence from the ASF for over a year (my previous email
on this thread was one of my first since returning) precisely because the
treatment I got on these mailing lists was so deleterious for my mental
health that I had to take a break, for my safety.
Positioning *war* as the can
Please forgive my ignorance on the matter, but isn't this a prestigious
Open Source software Foundation?
For such top engineers you think you would have less safety concerns.
Perhaps this is the Linux foundation's influence on the ASF?
Perhaps Schneier can comment on your seeming "Culture of Fear
Again this is not the world we occupy. There is no litmus test for who can
join our lists and participate. Safety remains a priority that needs to be
addressed- not for the majority, but for those occasional cases where it can
and does take place here.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Nov 14, 2016,
It's useful to be able to read commit diffs.
AIUI OpenOffice docs are zipped so diffs aren't generated by SVN/Git etc.
Also if the documentation source is all text-based then it's a lot
easier to do searches and scripted edits (e.g. to fix common typos)
On 14 November 2016 at 19:54, Manfred Mo
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