Re: [PHP] New lists (was [PHP] Attitude of B van Ouwerkerk)

2001-08-06 Thread Joel Ricker

From: Andreas D. Landmark [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 I'd second this suggestion, the general list has become flooded with posts
that
 seems like a pop-quiz taken straight from the manual...

Right. I've just signed up the list and I've all but given up on trying to
follow things.  Just way too much traffic for a mailing list to have.

If a seperate list for support or tutor or whatever you want to call gets
started, I'll be happy to volunteer my time to assist people but I'd really
like to be able to keep up with this list as I'm sure there are some great
advanced threads that I'm missing.

Joel



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Re: [PHP] New lists (was [PHP] Attitude of B van Ouwerkerk)

2001-08-05 Thread Andreas D. Landmark

At 04.08.2001 17:27, Joel Ricker wrote:
  Similarly the FAQ is easy to find, and I do believe the words support
  suggest where help may be found.

Actually my suggestion would be to take a page from way the Python lists are
and call it tutor or PHP-tutor.

I'd second this suggestion, the general list has become flooded with posts that
seems like a pop-quiz taken straight from the manual...

don't get me wrong, I'm not a newbiebasher (well, sometimes ;-), but wading 
through
simple posts is getting a bit tedious...


-- 
Andreas D Landmark / noXtension
Real Time, adj.:
 Here and now, as opposed to fake time, which only occurs there
and then.


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RE: [PHP] New lists (was [PHP] Attitude of B van Ouwerkerk)

2001-08-04 Thread Sam Masiello


I think the problem with spreading out discussions that can be as broad as
the PHP discussion is that you still tend to have people gravitate towards
some of the more general or higher level discussion groups regardless of
whether or not it should fall into the newbie category or not.

This is for a couple of reasons:
1) Newbies may think that their newbie group is read mainly by newbies...so
their question either might not get answered at all or will not receive the
thorough answer they were hoping for.
2) Being a newbie, they might think that their question is worthy (for
lack of a better term) of higher level discussion because, to them, it is a
very difficult problem to solve.

...not to mention that questions would then be spammed across multiple
mailing lists anyway.

Either way, we would still need a PHP General Forum, so I am not convinced
that creating more specialized mailing lists would accomplish much more than
creating MORE mail traffic (from the spammed questions) and alienating
people who used the more specialized lists because most everyone else is
still mainly reading the General Forum.

My 2 copper pieces worth.

Sam Masiello
Software Quality Assurance Engineer
Synacor
(716) 853-1362 x289
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 -Original Message-
From:   Darren Henderson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Thursday, August 02, 2001 10:41 AM
To: B. van Ouwerkerk
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:[PHP] New lists (was  [PHP] Attitude of B van Ouwerkerk)

On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, B. van Ouwerkerk wrote:

 There's nothing wrong with being a newbie.. the only newbie-problem I
 see/have is the lazy one.. ask ask ask ask without taking the time to read
 the manual or to do a search in the archive. Sure there are newbies who
 read the manual.. get some tutorials.. thats good. They should get all the
 support they need..

Unfortunately this kind of thing happens on all the mailing lists I've seen
that are devoted to questions. The real problem here is that the list is
simply too busy. I can do no more then skim the subject lines and then
usually delete all of it unless something jumps out at me.

It might be helpful if some new mailing lists were created, it wouldn't be a
perfect solution but it would help if there were some degree of self
selecting behavior possible. Currenty all questions go to php-general. If
there were, say, a php-newuser and a php-questions list then perhaps
php-general could be used for slightly higher level discussions. Actually
its probably too late to save php-general, hard to get people to
change. Maybe a new list that caters to a higher level of discussion, say
php-authoring or the like?

Just a thought. So much tends to get lost or over looked in high volume
mailing lists.


Darren Henderson  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: [PHP] New lists (was [PHP] Attitude of B van Ouwerkerk)

2001-08-04 Thread Joel Ricker

 Similarly the FAQ is easy to find, and I do believe the words support
 suggest where help may be found.

Actually my suggestion would be to take a page from way the Python lists are
and call it tutor or PHP-tutor.

Joel


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[PHP] New lists (was [PHP] Attitude of B van Ouwerkerk)

2001-08-03 Thread Darren Henderson

On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, B. van Ouwerkerk wrote:

 There's nothing wrong with being a newbie.. the only newbie-problem I 
 see/have is the lazy one.. ask ask ask ask without taking the time to read 
 the manual or to do a search in the archive. Sure there are newbies who 
 read the manual.. get some tutorials.. thats good. They should get all the 
 support they need..

Unfortunately this kind of thing happens on all the mailing lists I've seen
that are devoted to questions. The real problem here is that the list is
simply too busy. I can do no more then skim the subject lines and then
usually delete all of it unless something jumps out at me.

It might be helpful if some new mailing lists were created, it wouldn't be a
perfect solution but it would help if there were some degree of self
selecting behavior possible. Currenty all questions go to php-general. If
there were, say, a php-newuser and a php-questions list then perhaps
php-general could be used for slightly higher level discussions. Actually
its probably too late to save php-general, hard to get people to
change. Maybe a new list that caters to a higher level of discussion, say
php-authoring or the like?

Just a thought. So much tends to get lost or over looked in high volume
mailing lists.


Darren Henderson  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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RE: [PHP] New lists (was [PHP] Attitude of B van Ouwerkerk)

2001-08-03 Thread Martin Marconcini

IMO: There should be something like the OpenBSD-misc = PHP General, and
OpenBS-Tech = A more advanced list... Please do not cross post...



Regards,

Martin Marconcini
www.marconcini.com.ar

Life must be lived looking forward and can be understood only looking
backward. Soren Kierkegaard

 -Original Message-
 From: Sam Masiello [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2001 1:15 PM
 To: Darren Henderson
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: [PHP] New lists (was [PHP] Attitude of B van Ouwerkerk)
 
 
 I think the problem with spreading out discussions that can be as
broad as
 the PHP discussion is that you still tend to have people gravitate
towards
 some of the more general or higher level discussion groups
regardless
 of
 whether or not it should fall into the newbie category or not.
 
 This is for a couple of reasons:
 1) Newbies may think that their newbie group is read mainly by
 newbies...so
 their question either might not get answered at all or will not
receive
 the
 thorough answer they were hoping for.
 2) Being a newbie, they might think that their question is worthy
(for
 lack of a better term) of higher level discussion because, to them, it
is
 a
 very difficult problem to solve.
 
 ...not to mention that questions would then be spammed across
multiple
 mailing lists anyway.
 
 Either way, we would still need a PHP General Forum, so I am not
convinced
 that creating more specialized mailing lists would accomplish much
more
 than
 creating MORE mail traffic (from the spammed questions) and alienating
 people who used the more specialized lists because most everyone else
is
 still mainly reading the General Forum.
 
 My 2 copper pieces worth.
 
 Sam Masiello
 Software Quality Assurance Engineer
 Synacor
 (716) 853-1362 x289
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
  -Original Message-
 From: Darren Henderson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2001 10:41 AM
 To:   B. van Ouwerkerk
 Cc:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject:  [PHP] New lists (was  [PHP] Attitude of B van Ouwerkerk)
 
 On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, B. van Ouwerkerk wrote:
 
  There's nothing wrong with being a newbie.. the only newbie-problem
I
  see/have is the lazy one.. ask ask ask ask without taking the time
to
 read
  the manual or to do a search in the archive. Sure there are newbies
who
  read the manual.. get some tutorials.. thats good. They should get
all
 the
  support they need..
 
 Unfortunately this kind of thing happens on all the mailing lists I've
 seen
 that are devoted to questions. The real problem here is that the list
is
 simply too busy. I can do no more then skim the subject lines and then
 usually delete all of it unless something jumps out at me.
 
 It might be helpful if some new mailing lists were created, it
wouldn't be
 a
 perfect solution but it would help if there were some degree of self
 selecting behavior possible. Currenty all questions go to php-general.
If
 there were, say, a php-newuser and a php-questions list then perhaps
 php-general could be used for slightly higher level discussions.
Actually
 its probably too late to save php-general, hard to get people to
 change. Maybe a new list that caters to a higher level of discussion,
say
 php-authoring or the like?
 
 Just a thought. So much tends to get lost or over looked in high
volume
 mailing lists.
 


 Darren Henderson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
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 To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
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 For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: [PHP] New lists (was [PHP] Attitude of B van Ouwerkerk)

2001-08-03 Thread Miles Thompson

Darren, et. al.,

Everything gets posted here - general syntax, database and install 
questions. Just look at the volume of php-mysql related questions; if they 
were directly posted on php-db the volume would drop to a more manageable 
level. Similarly, usage of php-install would help reduce traffic on 
php-general.

VB used to be on just one list; it was broken up into several lists and all 
that resulted was a slew of cross postings, with no drop in volume.

Similarly there is no dearth of material on getting started with PHP. Maybe 
we just have to be a little tougher, collectively, and when truly 
elementary questions appear, politely and firmly direct the inquirer to the 
tutorials.

I'd also suggest that links to the FAQ and Tutorials be prominently 
displayed on php.net's home page. NO NO NO  - I'm wrong they ARE there, and 
pretty easy to find, and the tutorial page has links to other tutorials. 
Similarly the FAQ is easy to find, and I do believe the words support 
suggest where help may be found.

Maybe the problem is a poor educational system; some people are just too 
lazy to do research / properly phrase a query for a search engine / 
experiment a bit before posting?

I also suppose that the demand for dynamic web pages is driving people who 
primarily worked with html (maybe with visual tools) into a programming 
environment. They suddenly have to cope with flow control, tests and, quite 
often, use of a database too. Pretty daunting.

I do not believe a PHP-Newuser or PHP-Questions list would solve anything; 
all questions at that level can be answered through various tutorials and 
by WORKING THROUGH examples. I don't mean just cutting and pasting them, 
but changing them, breaking them, and finding out what happens.

And as for newbie-ishness, hell's bells, all languages /environments reduce 
us to that state at one time or another. I've been guilty of misplaced }, 
most famously when I plaintively demanded why my while loop wasn't looping. 
A keen-eyed reader spotted it. Newbie question? Yes. What I was trying to 
do with the loop? Don't think so.

I've written enough - Miles

PS For the first time a certain correspondent has come perilously close to 
auto-consignment to trash; instead he needs a high level of tough love.

At 10:40 AM 8/2/01 -0400, Darren Henderson wrote:
On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, B. van Ouwerkerk wrote:

  There's nothing wrong with being a newbie.. the only newbie-problem I
  see/have is the lazy one.. ask ask ask ask without taking the time to read
  the manual or to do a search in the archive. Sure there are newbies who
  read the manual.. get some tutorials.. thats good. They should get all the
  support they need..

Unfortunately this kind of thing happens on all the mailing lists I've seen
that are devoted to questions. The real problem here is that the list is
simply too busy. I can do no more then skim the subject lines and then
usually delete all of it unless something jumps out at me.

It might be helpful if some new mailing lists were created, it wouldn't be a
perfect solution but it would help if there were some degree of self
selecting behavior possible. Currenty all questions go to php-general. If
there were, say, a php-newuser and a php-questions list then perhaps
php-general could be used for slightly higher level discussions. Actually
its probably too late to save php-general, hard to get people to
change. Maybe a new list that caters to a higher level of discussion, say
php-authoring or the like?

Just a thought. So much tends to get lost or over looked in high volume
mailing lists.


Darren Henderson  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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