Re: How long to fix a bug?

2014-04-25 Thread circulars

Thank you.

People who report bugs are working for free too, and are also a part  
of the OpenSource community. We are all trying to make Open Office  
better.


Unfortunately something sub-optimal has emerged so it has been flagged  
up for that purpose. Please refer to the original email in this  
thread, which contains the details.


It consumes a lot of time to do that too.

Stay happy




On 25 Apr 2014, at 16:16, Urmas wrote:


How long does it take to fix a bug, please?


If you are not a paying customer, it can take forever. People in  
OpenSource tend to work for free not a bit more eager than everywhere  
else.





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Re: How long to fix a bug?

2014-04-25 Thread circulars

Many thanks Martin

Just serious word processing, actually.

Is there anywhere we can look at the the results of these elections?  
Have no idea how many votes a popular bug would get to put these  
figures in context.


As bug reporting is very much an esoteric process, it might be  
reasonable to speculate that the votes reflect the desires of the  
cognoscenti, which may differ markedly from the ordinary user, who  
just endures bugs and does their best to get by, never having heard of  
Bugzilla.


Also, am having trouble checking, but is it not the case that you only  
have 5 votes anyway. So once you have reported 5, you have no leeway  
to have any say in anything else. Maybe if  everyone was given 100  
votes (or something) the results would better reflect real preferences.


Stay happy



On 25 Apr 2014, at 01:53, Martin Groenescheij wrote:

I agree that this could be a problem for users that go further than  
word processing,

You're probably use it for desktop publishing.
If you want that this get more attention you have to pursue other  
users to vote for it.

For your information I have added the priorities and votes inline.
For me it looks like only a minority is interested to get this fixed  
or they are not aware that they can vote.


Sent from my mobile device.


On 25 Apr 2014, at 12:10 am, circul...@gmx.com wrote:

How long does it take to fix a bug, please?

And is there any point in reporting them?

Its great that some of them are getting confirmed now, but even that  
has taken several years in some of the examples below - 4 1/2 years  
in one. None have been fixed yet. (nb only have public wifi so can't  
download the latest beta - sorry).


There are several serious bugs to report - particularly in outline  
and template management, while working in metric (which presumably  
the vast majority of users do) is a nightmare at present. But doing  
so is time consuming,  and there seems little point if nothing is  
getting fixed, or certainly no urgency if it takes years to do so.





EXAMPLE 1: BUG IN OUTLINE - BUG 98752
https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=98752

This was first reported 02 February 2009 but was not confirmed.

It caused me huge problems in 2011 so was reported independently on  
the forum (because finding out how to report a bug was so obscure)  
and confirmed by Hagar Delest on 01 October 2011 here:


https://forum.openoffice.org/en/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=44287&p=204470&sid=d016d92716a51e5c9d2cf10631ae8b0d 
#p204470


Did as required. Nothing happened until 07 August 2013 when Rob  
picked it up, which was a very welcome surprise after so long.


This bug has Priority P3 and 2 votes.


EXAMPLE 2:  ORGANISING TEMPLATES - BUG 118552
https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=118552

First reported 26 October 2011. Confirmed on 03 April 2014. Still  
hasn't been fixed.


This bug has Priority P3 and 1 votes.



EXAMPLE 3: UPDATING STYLES - BUG 121785
https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=121785

Reported 18 Feb 2013. There is a problem with updating styles, which  
doesn't behave as stated in help (which covers the topic very badly).


On this one, can't get the problem confirmed, and can't even get a  
response.


This bug has Priority P3 and no vote.


EXAMPLE 4 : ICON LABELS BUG 121766
https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=121766

This one is embarrassing. Undo is labelled 'Can't Undo" and Redo  
similarly, and have been since 2007 at least, which must be obvious  
to millions of users. Astonishing that no-one has picked it up.


Reported it on 13 February 2013 was confirmed admirably quickly.

Naively, it would seem dead simple to fix - just correcting a couple  
of labels -  but it slipped through to OpenOffice 4 and is still  
there.


This bug has Priority P3 and no vote.

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Re: How long to fix a bug?

2014-04-25 Thread Urmas

How long does it take to fix a bug, please?


If you are not a paying customer, it can take forever. People in OpenSource 
tend to work for free not a bit more eager than everywhere else.





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Re: How long to fix a bug?

2014-04-25 Thread circulars

Rob:

Many thanks. A couple of responses below.

Plus an overarching one: There is nothing in Help to tell users how to  
report a bug. Nor a menu item to help them to do so.



On 24 Apr 2014, at 16:38, Rob Weir wrote:

On Thu, Apr 24, 2014 at 10:10 AM,   wrote:

How long does it take to fix a bug, please?



It depends on the bug.   Some get fixed quickly.  Some may never be  
fixed.



And is there any point in reporting them?



Yes.  Even if a bug is not quickly fixed it is good for the developers
to know what bugs are out there.  In some cases when they make a major
change in one area they will look in Bugzilla to see if there are any
other related bugs (lower priority ones) that they can fix at the same
time.

Bug reports are useful for users as well, and IT professionals who
support users.  The bug reports can describe workarounds, and at the
very least they confirm the bug exists, which can reduce the
frustration of users when they are not being certain.

Its great that some of them are getting confirmed now, but even that  
has
taken several years in some of the examples below - 4 1/2 years in  
one. None
have been fixed yet. (nb only have public wifi so can't download the  
latest

beta - sorry).



You can find ones older than that, if you look hard enough.  But this
is not a queue for movie tickets.  Bugs are triaged according to
severity and impact, not time.  Volunteers typically prioritize based
on that, though obviously their own interests and expertise play a
role as well.

The primary problem highlighted is that the bugs will not enter the  
queue until they are confirmed. Presumably someone examines them when  
they are submitted to decide whether to confirm them or not, as part  
of the triage. That is where things seem to be going wrong.


On that, would add that if, after having discovered a bug and  
presumably had a nightmare with it, then put in the time and effort  
necessary to report it, it is left unconfirmed without explanation,  
they are likely to conclude that it is not worth the trouble in future.


Might it be an idea to have a 'bug moderator', who you can appeal to  
if nothing happens? Or is that best done here? Trouble is a lot of  
people will not know of this forum, and it might waste users' time.







There are several serious bugs to report - particularly in outline and
template management, while working in metric (which presumably the  
vast

majority of users do) is a nightmare at present. But doing so is time
consuming,  and there seems little point if nothing is getting  
fixed, or

certainly no urgency if it takes years to do so.




EXAMPLE 1: BUG IN OUTLINE - BUG 98752
https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=98752

This was first reported 02 February 2009 but was not confirmed.

It caused me huge problems in 2011 so was reported independently on  
the
forum (because finding out how to report a bug was so obscure) and  
confirmed

by Hagar Delest on 01 October 2011 here:

https://forum.openoffice.org/en/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=44287&p=204470&sid=d016d92716a51e5c9d2cf10631ae8b0d 
#p204470


Did as required. Nothing happened until 07 August 2013 when Rob  
picked it

up, which was a very welcome surprise after so long.



The QA volunteers have been doing a great job working on the back log
of older, unconfirmed issues.  In many cases we find the old issues
are stuck for lack of additional information from the reporter of the
issue, e.g., lack of an example document.

Good to hear. Thanks to all concerned.

Not generalising from personal experience, but no-one has ever been  
back to me for more information on a reported bug. My feeling is that  
anyone who has gone to the trouble of logging a bug would be happy to  
help clarify it if approached.



In other cases old bugs are no longer reproducible.  They were fixed  
in an earlier release.  And

in some cases they are real defects which we are glad to classify as
such.   The goal of reviewing these old reports is to make sure that
Bugzilla correctly reflects the actual state of the OpenOffice
product, what bugs actually exist in the most recent version.  It is
slow work, but we're catching up.

What might be an idea is somewhere to look at stats for bugs -  
reported, confirmed, fixed etc, perhaps a listing of the pipe and  
those that are being currently resolved - so that folk can see what is  
going on. Or at minimum, putting a report in the new newsletter from  
time to time. Be much easier to appreciate the scale of the problem  
(for want of a better expression).


It would also be great to know what is being developed, enhanced etc -  
especially if we could make input before it is finalised.



Btw, if you (or anyone else) is interested in helping with this, we
welcome all volunteers.   Personally I find it a relaxing diversion to
review old bug reports, see if they still are bugs, remove duplicate
reports, etc.   Info for how to get involved is here:


http://openoffice.apache.org/orient

Re: How long to fix a bug?

2014-04-25 Thread circulars

Brian:

Many thanks for going to the trouble. Responses to your points are  
interwoven in green below.




On 24 Apr 2014, at 16:35, Brian Barker wrote:

At 15:10 24/04/2014 +0100, Nobody Noname wrote:

How long does it take to fix a bug, please?


When they are not bugs, a long time!

Yes, surely, very droll. But when they are... ?

Two of the examples were subsequently confirmed as bugs. But it took 4  
and a half years for BUG 98752 to be confirmed as a bug, and that was  
after Hagar Delest had confirmed it, as previously referenced. The  
other took more than two years.


In this, am presuming that if a bug is unconfirmed, it is not in the  
pipe to get fixed, and has in practice been dismissed. So all of that  
time is dead time.



https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=98752




EXAMPLE 3: UPDATING STYLES - BUG 121785
https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=121785

Reported 18 Feb 2013. There is a problem with updating styles, which  
doesn't behave as stated in help (which covers the topic very badly).


Are you sure this is a bug?

Yes. If you go to Help and follow the steps in 'Updating Styles From  
Selections' the style is not updated. It fails at step 3. So users are  
stuffed, essentially. Also see the pin note at the same reference.


Suppose there is a technical argument that it is not a bug because the  
program is right and Help is wrong, but from the users' point of view  
there is something very seriously wrong. So it needs to be fixed,  
whatever you want to call it.


NB That Help does not mention the toolbar icon for updating styles.  
Nor does it mention control click/update paragraph style.




o If you change the format of just some part of a paragraph, you have  
not changed the paragraph, so I would not expect or want any update to  
affect the paragraph style. I might want a character style updated,  
but that would presuppose that I'd made the change to an area that  
already had a non-default character style already applied.


Fair point. You can argue it both ways. But:

While Help tells you that it should, that is what should happen.
Pages works that way. Given apple's marketing preeminence, that would  
seem to suggest that it is not such a bad idea.
Working on long documents, it is much quicker and easier to change a  
small section then update the style than have to do some precision  
cursor work to amend and select the whole paragraph - which may bridge  
a page or more.


Note that, unlike the Default paragraph style, the Default character  
style has no properties and cannot be modified - or, therefore,  
updated.g


You can change the default paragraph style using control click or  
right click/update paragraph style... Provided the cursor is in  
default style when you do so.


o The behaviour of the Update Style menu item in the Styles and  
Formatting dialogue is dependent on the style selected in that  
dialogue - and this relies in turn on the selection of style types  
through the buttons in its toolbar. Note that you may have a character  
style and a paragraph style, say, with the same name. Your continued  
reference to plain "styles" suggests you may be missing this  
distinction.


Sorry for any imprecision. Paragraph styles infinitely more important  
in any serious word processing. That is why they are the only ones  
displayed in the toolbar drop down list.


o Your workaround through the context menu (and there is nothing  
"secret" about that, of course) works because that way you clarify  
that you are wanting to affect a paragraph style.


From the point of view of the ordinary user who does not know Open  
Office backwards it is secret because:


It is not mentioned in Help - see above
There is no icon for it
There is no menu item for it.
So unless you happen to stumble into it, you do not know it is there.  
Which is a real shame, because it is the most useful way to update  
styles, and at times the only certain and foolproof one.



o The behaviour of paragraph styles, character styles, and direct  
formatting does take a bit of learning.


It has certainly been a long and arduous learning curve for me. Assume  
the same for others, this is a real shame, as it should not be so  
difficult, nor mysterious, nor should you be tripped up by Help  
entries that don't work. All of that detracts greatly from the  
pleasure and utility of Open Office. My suspicion is that a lot of  
folk are stuck with the built in styles which are not to their taste  
so either don't use them, so lose functionality, or abandon Open  
Office for something else.








EXAMPLE 4 : ICON LABELS BUG 121766
https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=121766

This one is embarrassing. Undo is labelled 'Can't Undo" and Redo  
similarly, and have been since 2007 at least, which must be obvious  
to millions of users. Astonishing that no-one has picked it up.


I haven't "picked it up" because I see nothing to be picked up.  There  
are contexts in which you 

Re: How long to fix a bug?

2014-04-24 Thread Martin Groenescheij
I agree that this could be a problem for users that go further than word 
processing,
You're probably use it for desktop publishing.
If you want that this get more attention you have to pursue other users to vote 
for it.
For your information I have added the priorities and votes inline.
For me it looks like only a minority is interested to get this fixed or they 
are not aware that they can vote.

Sent from my mobile device.

> On 25 Apr 2014, at 12:10 am, circul...@gmx.com wrote:
> 
> How long does it take to fix a bug, please?
> 
> And is there any point in reporting them?
> 
> Its great that some of them are getting confirmed now, but even that has 
> taken several years in some of the examples below - 4 1/2 years in one. None 
> have been fixed yet. (nb only have public wifi so can't download the latest 
> beta - sorry).
> 
> There are several serious bugs to report - particularly in outline and 
> template management, while working in metric (which presumably the vast 
> majority of users do) is a nightmare at present. But doing so is time 
> consuming,  and there seems little point if nothing is getting fixed, or 
> certainly no urgency if it takes years to do so.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> EXAMPLE 1: BUG IN OUTLINE - BUG 98752
> https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=98752
> 
> This was first reported 02 February 2009 but was not confirmed.
> 
> It caused me huge problems in 2011 so was reported independently on the forum 
> (because finding out how to report a bug was so obscure) and confirmed by 
> Hagar Delest on 01 October 2011 here:
> 
> https://forum.openoffice.org/en/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=44287&p=204470&sid=d016d92716a51e5c9d2cf10631ae8b0d#p204470
> 
> Did as required. Nothing happened until 07 August 2013 when Rob picked it up, 
> which was a very welcome surprise after so long.

This bug has Priority P3 and 2 votes.

> EXAMPLE 2:  ORGANISING TEMPLATES - BUG 118552
> https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=118552
> 
> First reported 26 October 2011. Confirmed on 03 April 2014. Still hasn't been 
> fixed.

This bug has Priority P3 and 1 votes.

> 
> EXAMPLE 3: UPDATING STYLES - BUG 121785
> https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=121785
> 
> Reported 18 Feb 2013. There is a problem with updating styles, which doesn't 
> behave as stated in help (which covers the topic very badly).
> 
> On this one, can't get the problem confirmed, and can't even get a response.

This bug has Priority P3 and no vote.

> EXAMPLE 4 : ICON LABELS BUG 121766
> https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=121766
> 
> This one is embarrassing. Undo is labelled 'Can't Undo" and Redo similarly, 
> and have been since 2007 at least, which must be obvious to millions of 
> users. Astonishing that no-one has picked it up.
> 
> Reported it on 13 February 2013 was confirmed admirably quickly.
> 
> Naively, it would seem dead simple to fix - just correcting a couple of 
> labels -  but it slipped through to OpenOffice 4 and is still there.

This bug has Priority P3 and no vote.

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Re: How long to fix a bug?

2014-04-24 Thread Rob Weir
On Thu, Apr 24, 2014 at 10:10 AM,   wrote:
> How long does it take to fix a bug, please?
>

It depends on the bug.   Some get fixed quickly.  Some may never be fixed.

> And is there any point in reporting them?
>

Yes.  Even if a bug is not quickly fixed it is good for the developers
to know what bugs are out there.  In some cases when they make a major
change in one area they will look in Bugzilla to see if there are any
other related bugs (lower priority ones) that they can fix at the same
time.

Bug reports are useful for users as well, and IT professionals who
support users.  The bug reports can describe workarounds, and at the
very least they confirm the bug exists, which can reduce the
frustration of users when they are not being certain.

> Its great that some of them are getting confirmed now, but even that has
> taken several years in some of the examples below - 4 1/2 years in one. None
> have been fixed yet. (nb only have public wifi so can't download the latest
> beta - sorry).
>

You can find ones older than that, if you look hard enough.  But this
is not a queue for movie tickets.  Bugs are triaged according to
severity and impact, not time.  Volunteers typically prioritize based
on that, though obviously their own interests and expertise play a
role as well.

> There are several serious bugs to report - particularly in outline and
> template management, while working in metric (which presumably the vast
> majority of users do) is a nightmare at present. But doing so is time
> consuming,  and there seems little point if nothing is getting fixed, or
> certainly no urgency if it takes years to do so.
>
>
>
>
> EXAMPLE 1: BUG IN OUTLINE - BUG 98752
> https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=98752
>
> This was first reported 02 February 2009 but was not confirmed.
>
> It caused me huge problems in 2011 so was reported independently on the
> forum (because finding out how to report a bug was so obscure) and confirmed
> by Hagar Delest on 01 October 2011 here:
>
> https://forum.openoffice.org/en/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=44287&p=204470&sid=d016d92716a51e5c9d2cf10631ae8b0d#p204470
>
> Did as required. Nothing happened until 07 August 2013 when Rob picked it
> up, which was a very welcome surprise after so long.
>

The QA volunteers have been doing a great job working on the back log
of older, unconfirmed issues.  In many cases we find the old issues
are stuck for lack of additional information from the reporter of the
issue, e.g., lack of an example document.  In other cases old bugs are
no longer reproducible.  They were fixed in an earlier release.  And
in some cases they are real defects which we are glad to classify as
such.   The goal of reviewing these old reports is to make sure that
Bugzilla correctly reflects the actual state of the OpenOffice
product, what bugs actually exist in the most recent version.  It is
slow work, but we're catching up.

Btw, if you (or anyone else) is interested in helping with this, we
welcome all volunteers.   Personally I find it a relaxing diversion to
review old bug reports, see if they still are bugs, remove duplicate
reports, etc.   Info for how to get involved is here:

http://openoffice.apache.org/orientation/intro-qa.html

Regards,

-Rob


>
> EXAMPLE 2:  ORGANISING TEMPLATES - BUG 118552
> https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=118552
>
> First reported 26 October 2011. Confirmed on 03 April 2014. Still hasn't
> been fixed.
>
>
> EXAMPLE 3: UPDATING STYLES - BUG 121785
> https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=121785
>
> Reported 18 Feb 2013. There is a problem with updating styles, which doesn't
> behave as stated in help (which covers the topic very badly).
>
> On this one, can't get the problem confirmed, and can't even get a response.
>
>
>
> EXAMPLE 4 : ICON LABELS BUG 121766
> https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=121766
>
> This one is embarrassing. Undo is labelled 'Can't Undo" and Redo similarly,
> and have been since 2007 at least, which must be obvious to millions of
> users. Astonishing that no-one has picked it up.
>
> Reported it on 13 February 2013 was confirmed admirably quickly.
>
> Naively, it would seem dead simple to fix - just correcting a couple of
> labels -  but it slipped through to OpenOffice 4 and is still there.
>
>
>
>

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Re: How long to fix a bug?

2014-04-24 Thread Brian Barker

At 15:10 24/04/2014 +0100, Nobody Noname wrote:

How long does it take to fix a bug, please?


When they are not bugs, a long time!


EXAMPLE 3: UPDATING STYLES - BUG 121785
https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=121785

Reported 18 Feb 2013. There is a problem with updating styles, which 
doesn't behave as stated in help (which covers the topic very badly).


Are you sure this is a bug?
o If you change the format of just some part of a paragraph, you have 
not changed the paragraph, so I would not expect or want any update 
to affect the paragraph style. I might want a character style 
updated, but that would presuppose that I'd made the change to an 
area that already had a non-default character style already applied. 
Note that, unlike the Default paragraph style, the Default character 
style has no properties and cannot be modified - or, therefore, updated.
o The behaviour of the Update Style menu item in the Styles and 
Formatting dialogue is dependent on the style selected in that 
dialogue - and this relies in turn on the selection of style types 
through the buttons in its toolbar. Note that you may have a 
character style and a paragraph style, say, with the same name. Your 
continued reference to plain "styles" suggests you may be missing 
this distinction.
o Your workaround through the context menu (and there is nothing 
"secret" about that, of course) works because that way you clarify 
that you are wanting to affect a paragraph style.
o The behaviour of paragraph styles, character styles, and direct 
formatting does take a bit of learning.



EXAMPLE 4 : ICON LABELS BUG 121766
https://issues.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=121766

This one is embarrassing. Undo is labelled 'Can't Undo" and Redo 
similarly, and have been since 2007 at least, which must be obvious 
to millions of users. Astonishing that no-one has picked it up.


I haven't "picked it up" because I see nothing to be picked 
up.  There are contexts in which you cannot undo anything - for 
example, when you have just opened or reloaded a document - and the 
Undo menu item and Undo icon are each greyed out and - perhaps 
helpfully - changed to read Can't Undo. Similarly for Redo, which 
means something only immediately after an Undo and is otherwise 
greyed out and retitled. (Why it says Can't Restore instead of Can't 
Redo I don't know.)


Incidentally, I'm not sure I accept your stricture that "[i]t is also 
a very strong imperative that Open Office should be consistent with 
other productivity suites". I don't expect free software necessarily 
to be a clone of commercial products and I'm happy for OpenOffice to 
improve on such alternative products! (I suspect that in the area of 
styles it does.)


I trust this helps.

Brian Barker


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