On 12/8/22 9:25 AM, Tobias Burnus wrote:
Hi,

On 08.12.22 17:27, Steve Kargl via Fortran wrote:
On Wed, Dec 07, 2022 at 05:54:40PM -0800, Jerry D via Fortran wrote:
Other than Benson, I have received no sign of any interest from gfortran
developers to adopt a teaming/collaboration platform.  I am a bit
disappointed. Maybe my intent was misunderstood.  I am not suggesting
replacing the email approval process but there are many other features of these platforms, in particular, communication efficiency that would be very
helpful.

I personally do not have a strong preference for any. But every
additional communication channel costs time time (setting up, tracking
discussions etc.) and it is not really clear what's the benefits vs.
costs ratio.
For myself, a clear benefit is at a glance on my phone I can know if there is activity and i can reply on the fly while I am at work or whereever, or reply later as i choose without having to scan my emails

I don't mind adding yet another channel to watch, but I cannot guarantee
that I will be able to actively follow it. If it is not high volume and
I get some notification that something has changed by email, it might
work – or if it is interesting/often enough used, I might log in from
time to time – but otherwise it will simply get ignored. Not due to not
being interested but due to having too much else on to do.

Understood, we all have this issue.
I will keep the Mattermost workspace. If anyone want to join send me your
email and I will send you an invite.
Let's try it – please send an invite.
I wiil start sending invites. I am learning this thing myself.  I will also post to Fortran Discourse occasionally to see if anyone new may be interested in getting invited as well.  I have in mind the possibilities of this being a mentoring tool for any newer persons and a 'give me hint' place for the long timers trying to remember where this or that was in the code etc.


I think you're seeing the effects of the move to git and an aging
base of contributors.

I don't think that moving to 'git' really causes the problem – nor the
move to C++, given that is is not really visible in most code. I think
the main problem is that most things do work and attracting a new
contributor is always difficult. Google Summer of Code was one
successful way, but attracting contributors is not trivial.

Yes, I do not see git as the main issue. I use it often at work.  I also use C, C++, C#, Python, and some others on occasion.  The only trick is jumping between the various eye candy features. Code is code, but then i am sort of a generalist which is why sometime i get stuck in details. LOL

This year, two were interested working on gfortran but at the end it did
not work out – despite me spending quite some time to guide them to get
started.

If you can send me contact information on people.  Maybe I can invite them to the Mattermost. (Up to you of course)


Occasionally, Thomas
and I offer up patches, but this occurs in a rather sparse manner.
In fact, if I fix a bug, the patch is attached to the bugzilla report
where it sits until Harald stumbles across it or it bit rots.
...
"I don't have time"

Totally understand this issue.
I think we have three areas: bug fixes (where Harald does an awesome
job), cleanup/restructuring of some bad design, and new features (mainly
but not only F2018). The problem with the second item is that it takes
quite some work for little visible benefit; we do some bits here and
there for bug fixes (or for TS29113) but nothing larger. Likewise for
F2018, some low-hanging fruits are easily done, but some larger
development work is really due.

I still intend to do more on the gfortran side, but I am rather busy on
the OpenMP side (code, specification meetings including filing issues
and creating spec patches) and things like working on gfortran competes
with fixing other GCC issues (a pragma, documentation, long-standing
other Bugzilla bugs), fixing issues in external testsuites/libraries,
GSoC mentoring, internal mentoring etc. I still hope that I will do more
non-OpenMP gfortran work but it does not look as if I will do a lot any
time soon.

Tobias


Your contributions have always been very appreciated.

Jerry

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