3. I am new to open source and thus tentatively dipping my feet in the
waters. I want to know that some shark will not bite my toes off.
I had this happen myself in another community.
I asked a n00b question and the guy's response was offensive.
(I'm from NY.. my skin is think but this guy was a d$ck, and eventually got
censored by the project)

All we're asking is that people not be a jerk to people asking stupid
questions.
(Where being a jerk doesn't equal "go read the docs" or "go read this bit
of the docs", but does equal "Hey moron WTF is wrong with you, can't you
read a manpage")

I'm not sure why you're objecting to this unless you think you are likely
to violate a CoC..


On Tue, Dec 8, 2015 at 2:01 PM, anatoly techtonik <techto...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> On Tue, Dec 8, 2015 at 4:33 AM, Dirk Bächle <tshor...@gmx.de> wrote:
> > As Bill reported, people start to ask for a CoC when looking at a
> project.
>
> What are their motivations?
> 1. "I am acting according to rules. I want to know if your rules match
> those that I am acting."
> 2. "I am too vulnerable. I want to check if you will punish people who
> will offend me."
> 3. ?
>
> --
> anatoly t.
> _______________________________________________
> Scons-dev mailing list
> Scons-dev@scons.org
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>
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