Yep, and it's not just Clojure. This will end up flagging projects across all non-mainstream ecosystems. Whether it's Vim plugins, niche command-line tools, academic research code, or hobbyist libraries for things like game development or creative coding, they'll likely get flagged simply because they're often maintained by individual developers. These devs build the projects, iterate quickly in the early stages, and eventually reach a point where the code is stable and no longer needs frequent updates.
It's a shame that this tool penalizes such projects, which I think are vital to a healthy open source ecosystem.
It's a nice project otherwise. But flagging stable projects from solo developers really sticks out like a sore thumb. :(
Ironically your chance of getting a PR through is about 10x higher on smaller one-man-show repos than more heavily trafficked corporate repos that require all manner of hoops to be jumped through for a PR.
Yep, and it's not just Clojure. This will end up flagging projects across all non-mainstream ecosystems. Whether it's Vim plugins, niche command-line tools, academic research code, or hobbyist libraries for things like game development or creative coding, they'll likely get flagged simply because they're often maintained by individual developers. These devs build the projects, iterate quickly in the early stages, and eventually reach a point where the code is stable and no longer needs frequent updates.
It's a shame that this tool penalizes such projects, which I think are vital to a healthy open source ecosystem.
It's a nice project otherwise. But flagging stable projects from solo developers really sticks out like a sore thumb. :(
It would still count as "trustworthy" just wouldnt come out to 100/100 :(.
Ironically your chance of getting a PR through is about 10x higher on smaller one-man-show repos than more heavily trafficked corporate repos that require all manner of hoops to be jumped through for a PR.