Hello everyone, Just hacking around to see how interesting these sort of statistics might be. I've been an opponent of showing commit stats with fear that people will worry about it, but if this means more commits, closed bugs, and note moderations then what's wrong with that? Because we need these benefits. All ideas/thoughts welcome. On the TODO is adding lines changed/added/deleted but it's more work (both code, and on the svn server) but it's worth thinking about.
Also, it appears the 'closed documentation bugs' stat is incorrect. Unfortunately our method for tracking when a bug status changes is rather hackish, but I'll look into it. And I see the 'user notes' text contains a typo ;p Regards, Philip On May 11, 2011, at 11:49 AM, nore...@php.net wrote: > > Hello! > > This lists some of the activity found within the PHP documentation over at > php.net. Of course numbers mean nothing alone, but they do show general > activity around the PHP documentation. Dates of activity include: 2011-05-04 > to 2011-05-11 > > Those who made SVN commits: > ----------------------------------------------- > (php.net svn modules: phpdoc, phd, web/doc-editor) > > rquadling 45 > superb 19 > yannick 16 > shein 7 > jpberdejo 6 > seros 4 > nikola 4 > salathe 3 > jvenegasperu 3 > sh_mashaqi 2 > satoruyoshida 2 > bjori 2 > colder 1 > uw 1 > cubrid 1 > philip 1 > sixd 1 > aharvey 1 > honestqiao 1 > agarzon 1 > pierrick 1 > takagi 1 > edwincartagenah 1 > tony2001 1 > > > Those who closed documentation bugs: > ----------------------------------------------- > (bug categories: problem, translation, phd, editor) > > salathe 2 > yannick 1 > philip 1 > bjori 1 > pierrick 1 > > > Those who handled with user notes: > ----------------------------------------------- > (actions: delete, reject, edit) > > danbrown 43 > thiago 9 > salathe 3 > rquadling 2 > > >