2009/2/2 Nick Pilon <[email protected]>

> On Sunday 01 February 2009 16:17:53 Axel Liljencrantz wrote:
> > The fish wiki seems to never have really taken off. I'd be interestd to
> > hear peoples opinions on the web presence of fish. Would a project
> > managment tool like trac, redmine, etc. be a good idea? (Or septic, a
> > project managment tool written by my good friend Claes) Or maybe moving
> > over to gitorious? (I'm not too keen on github, since the code is closed)
> > Is a wiki worth the effort? A forum? Multiple mailing lists?
> >
> > Opinions are welcome, offers of actually getting down to it and
> > implementing something better than what exists today is much more
> welcome.
>
> wikis aren't a particularly good idea for free software projects except in
> some very specific situations. I've never seen them work well, and they
> usually
> just wind up making documentation hard to find and less searchable.
>
> I'd like to see a better bug tracking system. Sourceforge's, frankly,
> sucks,
> both in terms of usability and visibility. The mailing list works, but I've
> found that good bug trackers cut down on duplicate reports and help
> aggregate
> information about a bug.
>
> Good online source browsers are also nice. Again, Sourceforge has one (...
> I
> think?) but I don't remember it being particularly friendly. This is
> particularly good for fish, since one of the best sources of "how do I...
> ?"
> information for fish scripting is all the scripts that do most of the work
> for
> the shell.
>
> Have you considered moving to Google Code?
>

Haven't really evaluated Google code. I was under the impression that they
only supported svn, though. And if one of the primary reasons for switching
is to get a source code browser, that seems suboptimal. And honestly, the
only version control system I'd be willing to switch to right now is git.

Axel


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