Do you QA your Python? Was: 2.1 vs. 2.2
Paul Rubin
phr-n2002a at nightsong.com
Sun Apr 14 00:35:24 EDT 2002
Tim Peters <tim.one at comcast.net> writes:
> It's in the nature of open source development that volunteers scratch their
> own itches, then share what they've done because it does them good too to
> have their work widely adopted. If you can ride that curve, you can get an
> enormous amount of high-quality work for free. If not, you'll have to pay
> for it or go without.
A lot of stuff gets done because it needs to get done, rather than
scratch an itch.
> A crushing amount of debate over "stability" has gone by on Python-Dev the
> last week, and the one thing that strikes me over and over is that, with
> just a few minor exceptions, nobody volunteers to *do* anything except tell
> other people what to do. What are you willing to do to make your desires a
> reality? If it doesn't involve contributing work, time or money, you just
> want a free ride. But nobody owes anyone a free ride, and open source can't
> change that fact of life either.
In that particular debate, a lot of people were asking for certain new
features to be LEFT OUT of Python. I don't understand how someone can
volunteer to contribute work, time, or money toward leaving something out.
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