2008/1/3, Titus Brown <titus at caltech.edu>: > The question is, is reviewing patches a good place to contribute? Also, > if I (and others) could have a "core mentor" with commit access, that > might streamline things. As it is, I am worried that patch reviews will For a core_mentor/padawan (wink) relationship to work ok, you need that both parties get interested on working on the same stuff. For example, Mark has been working a lot on Decimal, and I have been a merely supervisor and committer of his changes, and we could generate successfully a good patch flow. I don't think that this can be successful when both parties tries to handle wide portions of Python, but I'd love to see a lot of this small sparks of productivity. Now thinking of how to produce this relationships, I think that I will change my approach to the issues. I'll start to be more aggressive when reviewing a patch or bug. Aggressive in the sense of asking/commenting/proposing even if I don't get the full grasp of the issue. This could lead to a better interaction on the mid/long term, even if in the short it appears to increase the noise a little. -- . Facundo Blog: http://www.taniquetil.com.ar/plog/ PyAr: http://www.python.org/ar/
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