MESSAGE
DATE | 2020-02-18 |
FROM | Andreas Enge
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SUBJECT | Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] State of the GNUnion 2020
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Hello,
On Tue, Feb 18, 2020 at 06:30:22PM +0200, Eli Zaretskii wrote: > > > And then we have Guile, whose development pace leaves a lot to be > > > desired, if we really want it to become the GNU standard extension > > > languages. Strangely, the Guile developers, including Andy Wingo, > > > don't seem to do anything about that. There are no discussions about > > > making the project more active, none at all. Does that mean the Guile > > > level of activity is OK with Andy? If so, how does that live in peace > > > with the seemingly grave outlook for the rest of GNU? > > > This argument is a simple application of the health criteria you > consider significant to your own work as a project manager.
bickering about the health of individual GNU packages is probably not very interesting concerning the health of the GNU project as a whole. But here you are simply wrong. I have no particular affiliation with GNU Guile, except that I use it when working on GNU Guix. But I can look up the ftp directory: https://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/guile/
Andy's (of course somewhat subjective, but reasonably debatable) criterion of health of a package was "a release in the last three years". So as you claim to do to ("this argument is a simple application..."), let us apply the criterion to GNU Guile. I see releases in every year since 1997, except for 1998, 2001, 2005, 2015. So "a simple application of the health criteria you consider significant" shows that GNU Guile has been a healthy project since its start, and what you write above is simply not true.
Andreas
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