Folks, whenever I make a change to something essential, and something that I'm not sure I understand for the full 100%, I tend to not check the mods in directly but in stead put a patch into the patch manager. This has happened recently with a setup.py and a configure.in patch, for instance. My idea was that whoever felt responsible for the file in question would see the patch email come by, have a look, and say "fine". But whereas some patches get looked at quickly some can sit there for days (or in some cases even months). This is a nuisance to me, as by the time someone looks at the patch my development version of the file has evolved again. Moreover, I get the impression that I'm the only person with checkin permissions that does this, and that the rest of the developer community just checks stuff in and counts on it being (a) correct or (b) quickly fixed by someone else. Am I too chicken and should I just check things in if I'm reasonably convinced that they're okay? -- Jack Jansen | ++++ stop the execution of Mumia Abu-Jamal ++++ Jack.Jansen@oratrix.com | ++++ if you agree copy these lines to your sig ++++ www.oratrix.nl/~jack | ++++ see http://www.xs4all.nl/~tank/ ++++
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