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On Mar 14, 2012 5:27 AM, "Antoine Pitrou" <solipsis@pitrou.net> wrote:
>
> On Tue, 13 Mar 2012 14:16:40 -0700
> Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Mar 13, 2012 at 12:49 PM, Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> wrote:
> > > Authors of separately maintained packages are, from our viewpoint, as
> > > eligible to help with tracker issues as anyone else, even while they
> > > continue work on their external package. Some of them are more likely than
> > > most contributors to have the knowledge needed for some particular issues.
> >
> > This is a good idea. I was chatting w. Senthil this morning about
> > adding improvements to urllib/request.py based upon ideas from
> > urllib3, requests, httplib2 (?), and we came to the conclusion that it
> > might be a good idea to let those packages' authors review the
> > proposed stdlib improvements.
>
> We don't have any provisions against reviewal by third-party
> developers already. I think the main problem (for us, of course) is that
> these people generally aren't interested enough to really dive in
> stdlib patches and proposals.
>
> For example, for the ssl module, I have sometimes tried to involve
> authors of third-party packages such as pyOpenSSL (or, IIRC, M2Crypto),
> but I got very little or no reviewing.
Rather than indicating apathy on the party of third party developers, this might be a sign that core Python is unapproachable or not worth the effort.
For instance I have several one line patches languishing, I can't imagine how disappointing it would be to have significantly larger patches ignored, but it happens.