On 31 Jul 2018, at 08:24, Rainer Hoerbe <rainer at
hoerbe.at> wrote:
Hi,
In my experience a rich and complex classification scheme works only with a small
coherent group of people. Therefore, if you want users to tag themselves, you will need a
quite small and simple list. Otherwise, you will have to assume the role of a
label-maintainer ;-)
Cheers, Rainer
Am 2018-07-31 um 00:47 schrieb Ivan Kanakarakis
<ivan.kanak at gmail.com>:
Hey everyone,
At some earlier point we had a discussion about creating labels for
the github repositories so that we (and users) can put an order in the
issues and pull requests.
So, I went around some big and some small-but-trending repos on github
and using the github-api and a shell script I got two files: one has
the labels by repo, the other is a list of all labels sorted and
unique'd. The latter is the interesting one, and from a quick look,
the labels with a prefix (area, component, kind, needs, priority,
scope, topic, type) seem to be the interesting ones.
Do you think those are useful? Would someone like to pick some,
propose a list and then help labelling the existing open issues?
PS: On another note, the cpython labels include "CLA signed" and "CLA
not signed". Maybe we can use those if we go forward with that.
Cheers,
--
Ivan c00kiemon5ter Kanakarakis >:3
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