Difference between revisions of "Bug or Suggestion"
From Dreamwidth Notes
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* Straightforward items that do not require community discussion. | * Straightforward items that do not require community discussion. | ||
− | See: [[Bug Report Workflow (Support)]] and [[Github Issues]]/[[ | + | See: [[Bug Report Workflow (Support)]] and [[Github Issues]]/[[Git How To]] (for developers) |
Revision as of 07:41, 21 October 2014
Dreamwidth has a few workflows for submitting items to Github Issues. The ideal workflow to use depends on the exact situation.
Suggestion
Dreamwidth solicits a wide range of user opinions on many proposed changes before approving an item for implementation. A relatively small percentage of the active user population of Dreamwidth is comfortable using Github Issues, compared to the users who follow the dw_suggestions community.
See: Suggestions Process
The following types of changes are particularly likely to be referred to the whole user community (not just staff, contractors, and developers) for discussion:
- New Feature
- An entirely new feature that does not currently exist.
- Enhancement
- Changes to improve an existing feature.
- Preferred Implementation
- Some new features, enhancements, and outright bug fixes require a decision about how best to do it out of two or more possible ways. The dw_suggestions participants can also provide feedback for this.
Bug
- Something that is broken (not functioning as designed).
- Something that is broken-as-designed (is functioning as designed, but how it is designed is bad), and the fix is unambiguous and does not require community discussion. (Example: a site image that lacks an alt tag and really needs one.)
- Straightforward items that do not require community discussion.
See: Bug Report Workflow (Support) and Github Issues/Git How To (for developers)