On 14.01.2016, at 13:18, Zeev Suraski <[email protected]> wrote: > The way I see it, we don't need to acknowledge having a problem in order to > want to improve. I'm sure that resonates with most developers on this list - > wanting to continuously improve does not mean you're saying that things were > problematic to begin with. Instead, it's an assumption which is literally > always true - wherever you are, whatever you do, you can always do better. > It's true for everything - processes, relationships, code - and mailing list > etiquette. > > The right question, IMHO, is do we want to improve? Do we want to try and be > more polite and respectful? Do we want to try and improve the atmosphere? > That's a much easier goal to rally around, I think, and for the most part, I > can hardly imagine there won't be consensus around it.
I really like this line of thinking, and the positivity it projects. David -- PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
