On Tuesday, 25 August 2020 23:44:02 CEST you wrote: > Or you can merge stable to master and be sure you won't forget anything. > Of course if master changed a lot you can't (easily) do that. But we > have a lot of repos that don't change very often and merging stable to > master works very well with them.
... > The problem is we don't always have a maintainer. A lot of apps are > community-maintained and if we wouldn't merge stable to master before a > new release we would reintroduce fixed bugs quite often. Basically, what you're saying is that KDE releases a lot of software that just basically never changes, and apart from some translation work is actually unmaintained. I don't think that those projects, or rather repositories, since if there's no work being done, it's hard to see that as a project, should shape policy. If a repo can get by with just merging stable to master, I don't think it's seeing meaningful development -- why should it even be released? -- https://www.krita.org
