[Python-Dev] Python-Dev Digest, Vol 108, Issue 7 (original) (raw)

Ryan Paullin ryanpaullin at gmail.com
Tue Jul 10 23:04:24 CEST 2012


spoke too early on its done sorry

On Tue, Jul 10, 2012 at 2:04 PM, Ryan Paullin <ryanpaullin at gmail.com> wrote:

thanks for the reply hastings ive been working on a loopback interface its done

On Fri, Jul 6, 2012 at 3:00 AM, <python-dev-request at python.org> wrote: Send Python-Dev mailing list submissions to python-dev at python.org

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Today's Topics: 1. Re: GitHub mirror (Was: Bitbucket mirror?) (martin at v.loewis.de) 2. Bloody FAQ (Was: [Python-ideas] itertools.chunks(iterable, size, fill=None)) (anatoly techtonik) 3. Re: Bloody FAQ (Was: [Python-ideas] itertools.chunks(iterable, size, fill=None)) (Mark Lawrence) 4. Re: Bloody FAQ (Was: [Python-ideas] itertools.chunks(iterable, size, fill=None)) (Stefan Behnel) 5. Re: Bloody FAQ (Was: [Python-ideas] itertools.chunks(iterable, size, fill=None)) (Paul Boddie) 6. EuroPython 2012 Language Summit is Canceled. (Larry Hastings) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 20:27:02 +0200 From: martin at v.loewis.de To: python-dev at python.org Subject: Re: [Python-Dev] GitHub mirror (Was: Bitbucket mirror?) Message-ID: <20120705202702.Horde.Yh-RBqGZi1VP9dx2H7Nj-nA at webmail.df.eu> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed; DelSp=Yes >> You won't get any changes in to CPython by creating pull requests. We >> use http://bugs.python.org/ for that, sorry. > > Question -- is there a reason to abide by this rule for docs? That is, if we > could get a sympathetic core dev to look at pull requests for docs as part of > a streamlined process, would it cause problems? How do you communicate a "pull request"? On bitbucket, there is a "pull request" UI resulting in a tracker item being generated (and an email being sent), but hg.python.org doesn't have a notion of pull requests. Of course, you could use any communication means (email, telephone call, carrier pigeon) to request a pull from a "sympathetic core dev". > (What I'm really asking is whether or the bugs.python.org process is > considered critical for potentially minor doc changes and additions.) The sympathetic core dev is mostly free to bypass any submission process initially; commits that bypass established procedures will likely be questioned only after the fact. In the specific case, I'd be worried to verify that the submitter has provided a contributor form. That's easy to do in the bug tracker, but difficult to do in an offline pull request. Of course, for a really minor doc change (e.g. typo fixes), no contrib form is necessary. Regards, Martin

------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Thu, 5 Jul 2012 22:41:29 +0300 From: anatoly techtonik <techtonik at gmail.com> To: Stefan Behnel <stefanml at behnel.de> Cc: python-ideas at python.org, python-dev at python.org Subject: [Python-Dev] Bloody FAQ (Was: [Python-ideas] itertools.chunks(iterable, size, fill=None)) Message-ID: <CAPkN8x+A-OYWNLNKDH=_ _6GnQn+oTb3LMnimHYs9zkYmWR1GTgA at mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 On Thu, Jul 5, 2012 at 7:50 PM, Stefan Behnel <stefanml at behnel.de> wrote: > anatoly techtonik, 05.07.2012 15:36: >> On Sun, Jul 1, 2012 at 12:09 AM, Terry Reedy wrote: >>> From Raymond's first message on http://bugs.python.org/issue6021 , add >>> grouper: >>> >>> "This has been rejected before. >> >> I quite often see such arguments and I can't stand to repeat that >> these are not arguments. It is good to know, but when people use that >> as a reason to close tickets - that's just disgusting. > > The real problem is that people keep bringing up topics (and even spell > them out in the bug tracker) without searching for existing discussions > and/or tickets first. That's why those who do such a search (or who know > what they are talking about anyway) close these tickets with the remark > "this has been rejected before", instead of repeating an entire heap of > arguments all over again to feed a discussion that would only lead to the > same result as it did before, often several times before. Make the bloody FAQ and summarize this stuff? Why waste each others time? If people don't enjoy repeating themselves over and over - there is a bloody wiki. What should happen to people to start extracting gems of knowledge from piles of dusty sheets called list "archives" for others to admire. No, it is easier to say "it was already discussed many times", "why don't you Google yourself", "so far you're only complaining", etc. If people can't find anything - why everybody thinks they are ignorant and lazy. Even if it so, why nobody thinks that maybe that bloody Xapian index is dead again for a bloody amount of moons nobody knows why and how many exactly? Why nobody thinks that lazy coders can also help with development? Maybe that laziness is the primary reason some major groups actually prefer Python to Java, C++ and other more interesting languages (such as PHP) when it comes to typing? Make it easy and the patches will follow. Answers like "this was discussed before" don't make it easy to understand, and leaving users rereading old 19xx archives that people don't reread themselves will likely make users bounce and never (NEVER!) come up with some proposal again. An "organic" way to keep traffic low. Miscommunication is a bad experience for users, bad experience for developers, everybody is annoyed and as a result such nice language as Python loses points on TIOBE (and convenient chunk() functions to munch-munch on the sequence data). Wheew. :-F ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 20:55:09 +0100 From: Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy at yahoo.co.uk> To: python-dev at python.org Cc: python-ideas at python.org Subject: Re: [Python-Dev] Bloody FAQ (Was: [Python-ideas] itertools.chunks(iterable, size, fill=None)) Message-ID: <jt4re5$3gs$1 at dough.gmane.org> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed On 05/07/2012 20:41, anatoly techtonik wrote: > On Thu, Jul 5, 2012 at 7:50 PM, Stefan Behnel <stefanml at behnel.de> wrote: >> anatoly techtonik, 05.07.2012 15:36: >>> On Sun, Jul 1, 2012 at 12:09 AM, Terry Reedy wrote: >>>> From Raymond's first message on http://bugs.python.org/issue6021 , add >>>> grouper: >>>> >>>> "This has been rejected before. >>> >>> I quite often see such arguments and I can't stand to repeat that >>> these are not arguments. It is good to know, but when people use that >>> as a reason to close tickets - that's just disgusting. >> >> The real problem is that people keep bringing up topics (and even spell >> them out in the bug tracker) without searching for existing discussions >> and/or tickets first. That's why those who do such a search (or who know >> what they are talking about anyway) close these tickets with the remark >> "this has been rejected before", instead of repeating an entire heap of >> arguments all over again to feed a discussion that would only lead to the >> same result as it did before, often several times before. > > Make the bloody FAQ and summarize this stuff? Why waste each others > time? If people don't enjoy repeating themselves over and over - there > is a bloody wiki. What should happen to people to start extracting > gems of knowledge from piles of dusty sheets called list "archives" > for others to admire. > > No, it is easier to say "it was already discussed many times", "why > don't you Google yourself", "so far you're only complaining", etc. If > people can't find anything - why everybody thinks they are ignorant > and lazy. Even if it so, why nobody thinks that maybe that bloody > Xapian index is dead again for a bloody amount of moons nobody knows > why and how many exactly? Why nobody thinks that lazy coders can also > help with development? Maybe that laziness is the primary reason some > major groups actually prefer Python to Java, C++ and other more > interesting languages (such as PHP) when it comes to typing? Make it > easy and the patches will follow. Answers like "this was discussed > before" don't make it easy to understand, and leaving users rereading > old 19xx archives that people don't reread themselves will likely make > users bounce and never (NEVER!) come up with some proposal again. An > "organic" way to keep traffic low. > > Miscommunication is a bad experience for users, bad experience for > developers, everybody is annoyed and as a result such nice language as > Python loses points on TIOBE (and convenient chunk() functions to > munch-munch on the sequence data). > > Wheew. :-F > Can I safely assume that you are volunteering to do the work required? -- Cheers. Mark Lawrence.

------------------------------ Message: 4 Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 21:58:52 +0200 From: Stefan Behnel <stefanml at behnel.de> To: python-dev at python.org Cc: python-ideas at python.org Subject: Re: [Python-Dev] Bloody FAQ (Was: [Python-ideas] itertools.chunks(iterable, size, fill=None)) Message-ID: <jt4rlt$45k$1 at dough.gmane.org> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 anatoly techtonik, 05.07.2012 21:41: > On Thu, Jul 5, 2012 at 7:50 PM, Stefan Behnel wrote: >> anatoly techtonik, 05.07.2012 15:36: >>> On Sun, Jul 1, 2012 at 12:09 AM, Terry Reedy wrote: >>>> From Raymond's first message on http://bugs.python.org/issue6021 , add >>>> grouper: >>>> >>>> "This has been rejected before. >>> >>> I quite often see such arguments and I can't stand to repeat that >>> these are not arguments. It is good to know, but when people use that >>> as a reason to close tickets - that's just disgusting. >> >> The real problem is that people keep bringing up topics (and even spell >> them out in the bug tracker) without searching for existing discussions >> and/or tickets first. That's why those who do such a search (or who know >> what they are talking about anyway) close these tickets with the remark >> "this has been rejected before", instead of repeating an entire heap of >> arguments all over again to feed a discussion that would only lead to the >> same result as it did before, often several times before. > > Make the bloody FAQ and summarize this stuff? Why waste each others > time? Yes, that is exactly the question. It takes time to write things up nicely. I mean, once someone has pointed out to you that this has been discussed before, you could just go, look it up (or search for it), and then put it into a Wiki or blog post yourself, or sum it up and send it to the mailing list as a reply. Why rely on others to do it for you? Stefan ------------------------------ Message: 5 Date: Thu, 5 Jul 2012 23:11:46 +0200 From: Paul Boddie <paul at boddie.org.uk> To: python-dev at python.org Subject: Re: [Python-Dev] Bloody FAQ (Was: [Python-ideas] itertools.chunks(iterable, size, fill=None)) Message-ID: <201207052311.46867.paul at boddie.org.uk> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" Stefan Behnel wrote: > anatoly techtonik, 05.07.2012 21:41: > > > > Make the bloody FAQ and summarize this stuff? Why waste each others > > time? > > Yes, that is exactly the question. > > It takes time to write things up nicely. I mean, once someone has pointed > out to you that this has been discussed before, you could just go, look it > up (or search for it), and then put it into a Wiki or blog post yourself, > or sum it up and send it to the mailing list as a reply. Why rely on others > to do it for you? To be fair, Anatoly has done quite a bit of maintenance on some of the Wiki content around various aspects of the project, so it's not as if he's demanding anything out of the ordinary or asking for others to do things that he isn't already doing in some sense. My experience is that there usually needs to be some willingness on the other end of the transaction, and if it takes repetition to encourage it amongst those who don't see the current situation as a problem for them, then so be it. Of course, this kind of documentation activity, where one gathers together historical decisions and the consensus from long-forgotten discussions, is pretty thankless work. I occasionally regard it as worthwhile if only to bring up something someone said as an inconvenient interruption in any current discussion, but that's a pretty minimal reward for all the effort unless one has such work as part of one's daily routine. Paul ------------------------------ Message: 6 Date: Fri, 06 Jul 2012 08:47:30 +0200 From: Larry Hastings <larry at hastings.org> To: python-dev at python.org, python-committers at python.org Subject: [Python-Dev] EuroPython 2012 Language Summit is Canceled. Message-ID: <4FF68A02.8000500 at hastings.org> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; Format="flowed" I only got one more RSVP and zero topics for the docket. So let's sprint instead. See you at the PyCon 2013 Language Summit, //arry/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <_ _http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/attachments/20120706/f13295aa/attachment-0001.html_ _> ------------------------------


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