As we’ve discussed on some recent hangouts, there’s a substantial problem with the large number of open GitHub issues in the TiddlyWiki5 repository - there are currently 535 open tickets. It’s a problem because there’s too many to really use them effectively. The shift of policy that we’ve discussed is to revert to using the GitHub issues list more strictly as the “todo” list for the core developers. (Other discussions should be on our mailing lists — until we’ve got federation working sufficiently).
As part of that shift we need to start to close down issues that aren’t actionable. (Closing these issues doesn’t need to close down the discussion; the comment features like notifications work just as well for closed issues).
In the past, we’ve reviewed the issues in a hangout. Now there’s a lot more of them, just reviewing each is an incredibly sizeable task: looking at each one for 1 minute seconds will take nearly 9 hours.
So, in a spirit of spreading the workload a little, I’d be very grateful if anyone who has created issues in the past to just check that all their currently open issues are still relevant and meet the standards to be retained as a useful, actionable issue ticket:
* descriptions of bugs/crashes
* concrete proposals for enhancements
To find the open issues you have created, visit
https://github.com/Jermolene/TiddlyWiki5/issues and find the box labelled “Filter”. Enter the string "is:open author:twMat” (substituting your GitHub handle for Mat’s). You should see a list of open issues created by you. For example:
https://github.com/Jermolene/TiddlyWiki5/issues?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=is%3Aopen+author%3AtwMat
Even if we can just close the outdated issues I think we could clear the total considerably.
Let me know if you have any questions or comments.
Many thanks,
Jeremy.