[Python-Dev] Fwd: 2.6 and 3.0 project management

Guido van Rossum guido at python.org
Sun Mar 16 17:40:32 CET 2008


Sorry, forgot to CC this to the list.
On Sun, Mar 16, 2008 at 9:31 AM, <skip at pobox.com> wrote:
 >
 > Guido> It has a much more detailed set of categories, organized as a
 > Guido> tree. Our project alone probably has 20-30 different bug
 > Guido> categories. New bugs in those categories are automatically CC'ed
 > Guido> to our group's mailing list (which isn't the same as
 > Guido> auto-assignment).
 >
 > Adding categories should be easy. Organized in trees? Not so sure.
 The tree is really useful because it means that end users can assign
 bugs to the top-level node for a project and the project members can
 move it to the correct subnode. This can even happen in two triage
 stages for large projects.
 > Guido> There are also more "bug states" you can use to track progress of
 > Guido> a bug through the system: unassigned, assigned, accepted (meaning
 > Guido> the assignee is actually working on it). (There are also a whole
 > Guido> bunch that I don't find so useful, and severam that roundup
 > Guido> already supports.)
 >
 > Again, I think this should be easy.
 It's also the least important one on my list.
 > Guido> But perhaps the best feature is "hot lists" -- arbitrary,
 > Guido> ordered, groupings of selected bugs. Each bug can be assigned to
 > Guido> as many hot lists as you want. Seeing the list of all bugs in a
 > Guido> particular hot list is one click away. We use this for overlaying
 > Guido> project management categories and priorities, such as "code",
 > Guido> "documentation", "configuration" as well as "next internal
 > Guido> release", "must have", "post launch" etc.
 >
 > A hot list sounds like a saved search, which Roundup already supports. It
 > also supports making these saved searches public. I suspect you could
 > define one or more saved public searches which correspond to desired hot
 > lists.
 Not quite. Items don't automatically end up on a hot list; they must
 explicitly be put on one. I'm not sure how you'd simulate this via
 saved searches. Maybe a combination of a custom keyword *and* a saved
 search would help. However this doesn't scale so well, because
 keywords show up in everybody's UI. Hot lists are only visible to
 users who care to subscribe to them.
[Georg, in a later post]
> Doesn't this match Roundup's keywords?

See above answer.
-- 
--Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)


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