On 7/18/19 03:18, Hans Dembinski via Boost wrote:
On 17. Jul 2019, at 21:34, Mateusz Loskot via Boost
wrote: On Wed, 17 Jul 2019 at 19:50, Maarten Verhage via Boost
wrote:
<snip>
I have sent a private email to Michael Caisse and Joel de Guzman (X3 author) for what I think are improvements for the documentation.
IMHO, I'd be careful about using private channels for communication regarding open source projects. Don't be surprised if your message will go to /dev/null.
Open source projects have issue trackers, mailing lists and other *public* *opt-in* channels which, IMHO, are the right ways to direct a project-specific communication.
To add to Mateusz: by sending your criticism privately you remove the opportunity for others to work on this issue. Maybe the maintainer of the library has no time to do it, but someone else feels like giving it a shot. Issues need to be public.
It is also a sudden change in your attitude, Maarten. You started this thread with a public criticism about the quality of "the Boost docs", and now you prefer to send your comments for specific improvements privately?
I think all Boost authors can handle public criticism, especially if it is written in a respectful and constructive way. If they disagree strongly with you, a maintainer can always just delete the issue.
I agree that open source is best done in the public. Just as a follow-up, Joel responded the day the email was received and encouraged Maarten to open a github issue ending with: "I think it's best to have this public so people, including me and Michael, can discuss freely in a more accessible manner than email." I hope all of these people that are concerned about keeping things public will actually help out with the docs. -- Michael Caisse Ciere Consulting ciere.com