2 Aug
2018
2 Aug
'18
8:42 a.m.
On 2018-08-02 04:18 AM, Mateusz Loskot via Boost wrote: > On 2 August 2018 at 10:09, Stefan Seefeld via Boost >wrote: >> On 2018-08-02 03:59 AM, Mateusz Loskot via Boost wrote: >>> Paul Bristow suggested [1] >>> >>> "We might also re-host this document somewhere on github/boostorg?" >>> >>> [1] https://lists.boost.org/Archives/boost/2018/07/242617.php >>> >>> I'd like to edit and move the wiki page away from Trac. >>> >>> IMHO, it is reasonable to host it not on GitHub wiki but >>> on boost.org along other guidelines, for example, at >>> https://www.boost.org/development/warnings.html >>> >>> - It is easy to update website via pull requests. >>> - Any updates would be a subject of some review at least >>> >>> Thoughts? Objections? >> I don't think this is a good idea, as it contributes to the proliferation of >> locations to look for to find information (or to contribute updates), which >> will also result in duplicate (in the best case) or contradictory (in the >> worst case) information. > You've lost me. > I'm suggesting *single* place to maintain all the common Boost development > guidelines, namely boost.org. > >> Ideally, boost.org should consist of a *very* small >> number of static pages (a hub, really) with links to other pages, such as >> project-specific websites (e.g. http://boostorg.github.io/ ), > Clearly, we have a hierarchy of the recommendations here: > - common guidelines > - library-specific guidelines based on/extending the common ones > > I'm talking about common guidelines here, not the library-specific ones. > >> or the wiki (https://github.com/boostorg/boost/wiki).> Unsubscribe & other changes: > I suggest to not to maintain common guidelines on GitHub wiki or > anywhere else - Wiki is volatile, > too easy to edit by too many or too easy to sneak unwanted edits. I think it's a judgment call, really: I see your point, and I agree: on the one hand we have version-controlled (relatively static) content, on the other we have easy-to-change volatile content. If it were for truly static content, I would wholeheartedly agree with you. But a document describing how to deal with (compiler-specific) warnings is inherently a moving target, and thus will quickly get stale unless it's been actively maintained (read: updated regularly). And if it's hard to change, people will just add their own guidelines elsewhere... Stefan -- ...ich hab' noch einen Koffer in Berlin...