Comment by naasking
10 months ago
> 5 years later, it's still not there. It was just a one-liner, and I'm not really sure why it never got added.
I think they expect people who want things to advocate harder than just mentioning it once. If no one brings it up again, then they assume that no one cares.
this seems very inefficient and the opposite of what I assumed. repeated requests take up time on both sides and are not a very good measure of how important something is.
This is how the most of the open-source development works. There are many projects with thousands of issues and PRs. Those that will get most attention, typically gets prioritized.
This is even how closed source development works. If you throw issues in a backlog and never follow up to advocate for it then it will never get done.
it's not perfect but it works.
well, apparently it doesn't.
3 replies →
why bother infering such intent when the obvious answer - that they simply forgot about it with no ill intentions - is right there?
Requiring people to advocate for their changes is not ill-intent. It handles all cases such as forgetting/missing a patch, and disagreement whether something is needed. The point is there's no system in place to track which patches "should ideally be included but weren't for some reason", it's up for the people who need them to push for them.
Quite the opposite. If you “pester” for something, they’ll explicitly reject it.
I didn't say pester, I said advocate for it.
It's the same thing.