← Back to context

Comment by drenvuk

7 years ago

This guy has the right idea. Do you think it's worth it to send a PR because it's a cool project? Submit a PR. Maybe because you submit a PR more people submit PRs. Keep your fork and pull the changes that you like while giving back things you think are useful. I've never really understood why people actually want to deal with the people on the other side of the code. I just want your code, not you. I really don't care about you. I can hardly expect you to care about me. Your code and what I can do with it are more interesting than you in nearly all circumstances. So, I contribute to the codebase and I take what I want. Your opinions and thoughts are usually useless.

OpenBSD has the proper motto for this: "Shut up and hack". If more oss devs followed the motto then they would be happier as a whole.

With the CoC in most projects, that's changing. See also: the Python Mailing list, where threads are locked and people are being banned for CoC violations.

  • It's like you only read the end of my post and skipped the rest of it. I'm going to be a dick here when I say this but this is the reason I have my way of dealing with things people... What you just posted is useless. I don't give a damn. If need be I will fork it, work on it, submit a PR if I make something useful and take what's useful that other people have made for my own code, even among the other forks/branches people have made if it's easy enough to find.

    My interaction with them is limited to the functionality of the code that I have written and the bare minimum effort needed to let them know of its existence. Anything more is a waste of my time - I have things to build.

    • I know what you mean, but it's not as clear cut as you think it is.

      You don't operate in a vacuum when you work on projects. What if you think someone is wrong? Being direct might be a risk, because then the community might not be seen as "welcoming to newcomers" anymore.

      I mean, ideas don't come out of nowhere for projects, and people who care about things, will be passionate about them. What if someone comes in the way of you building things? What then?

      1 reply →