On 2 Apr 2015 at 12:42, Emil Dotchevski wrote:
My concern is that while encouraging experts to act as review managers is a good thing, encouraging developers of arbitrary experience (there is no screening process for submitting a library for Boost review) to act as review managers probably isn't.
I know what you mean. However acting as review manager requires quite a different skill set. All you really need is the ability to tell whether a point in an expert review has merit or not, and therefore to weight it appropriately in the report and recommendation. You don't need to be expert yourself, just "expert aware" if that makes sense. And if a review manager wrote a report which made no sense, people would call them on it. Besides, looking at the libraries in the formal review queue as I've been doing a lot of recently there isn't one where the programmer isn't well above average. I think Boost library review queue submission is probably highly self selecting - your average programmer isn't willing to sacrifice the blood and treasure to submit a library for review. Niall -- ned Productions Limited Consulting http://www.nedproductions.biz/ http://ie.linkedin.com/in/nialldouglas/