I agree with Paul, There is no harm in having a CoC and to follow the
general ASF one.
I run GR8Conf, and we added a CoC for the conference, even without ever
having to use it, but it's nice to have, in case someone does misbehave. It
gives the organizers a tool to ask people to leave, if stepping
I don't think anyone is suggesting we need a separate CoC. We just now have
a short para which shows the link to the ASF one:
https://github.com/apache/groovy/blob/master/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
Groovy has been very lucky to have on the whole a very friendly community.
I guess in any community you can
+1 for having a COC
> On Nov 18, 2020, at 8:48, Paul King wrote:
>
>
>
> Hi everyone,
>
> We have been fortunate that most of the time, the discussions within our
> community are very respectful, so I don't think we need to have an elaborate
> discussion about a project-specific code of
Ever since Linux Foundation started pushing the COC gags into ASF
projects I kept wondering if people won't behave in civil manner - just
like Paul has alluded to - unless they are explicitly told how to be
good boys and girls?
Let me ask a perhaps naive but a very honest question: why do we r
Hi Paul, no actual objections to the name - just a joke about the use of
offensive language, to lighten the mood on a heavy subject. With
honestly no intention to COCblock anyone ;-)
On 19/11/2020 03:57, Paul King wrote:
mg, what other suggestions do you have? Would you prefer "Community
con
We have a few bug fixes clocked up against the various releases. I'll
probably kick off some releases next week. Time to get in your priority
fixes if you want to make the train. I'll do at least 3.0.7 and 2.5.14.
Cheers, Paul.