At both https://github.com/evancz/guide.elm-lang.org/pulls and https://github.com/elm-lang/elm-lang.org/pulls there's a decent number of PRs that would be useful if merged.A lot of these are simple gotchas that can save a beginner a lot of time.
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Evan works by batching requests and then handling multiple relevant ones in one go. So, some of the pulls might get through at one point.
Also, the guide is basically Evan's book. The book is in a state of flux, changing and being rewritten. Pull requests make less sense there.
On Tue, Oct 18, 2016 at 1:47 AM, Eric Thomas <eric.l....@gmail.com> wrote:
At both https://github.com/evancz/guide.elm-lang.org/pulls and https://github.com/elm-lang/elm-lang.org/pulls there's a decent number of PRs that would be useful if merged.A lot of these are simple gotchas that can save a beginner a lot of time.
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Why is it that the language is entirely dependent on one person? I get that Evan is the BDFL but there should be a core community that can approve these without his approval.As for the book, I do remember that he had an issue with people modifying the book from his keynote at Elm-Conf. However, this is the primary learning resource people will use to pick up Elm. Nobody wants to sift through hundreds of 3rd party blog posts, etc. Elm's success is dependent on how good the official guides are.If Evan does not want people to make changes to the book, then he should host it on his own website.
Also, contributions to the Elm FAQ are welcome.
It’s a community document hosted as an elm-community repo at GitHub.
Most PRs to that repo are merged quickly as long as they don’t duplicate other material already in the FAQ document.
I believe there already is a "community edition" over at https://www.elm-tutorial.org/en/