Quote:
WarDick wrote:
For example WFSection was released on Friday. For the complexity of this code it is amazingly bug free. Catzwolf did an exemplary job. However the code was a long time in coming. The development could have been accelerated by using the minds of the community. Many things happen, people have to eat, so they work, they have family commitments, the project gets delayed. But with a world wide community such as this someone is always ready to join the fray 24 hours a day 7 days a week. By Monday morning many of the remaining bugs have been squashed. This is because this whole community is very saavy. Sometimes many heads are better than one. Using the community is like tapping the universal mind. As we all know developers sometimes just run out of gas. Here we have a community eager to solve the task.
Hi WarDick,
First of all thank you for your kind words, this actually means a lot to me.
I agree with you that WF-Sections V2 was a long time in coming along and I do know that the release date did actually take longer than I had intended. This was partly due to two reasons:
1, Life: This last year in my private life has seen many changes etc etc (won't go into detail here) But it surprising that I have had time to code at all. I do this in my spare time and if someone was to pay me for the development of my modules, there would be a new release every week lol. But the reality is, I can only do what I can
2, Module Development: WF-Sections is now not the only Module I am currently writing, the last count I think there where about 10 of them (Not all have been released or are for clients) and I try to give as much support as I can when I can.
When it came to re-writing WF-Sections, I purposely took my time over the writing, coding and implementing the ideas that where given to me from the many users out there. I vowed I would not make the same mistake with WF-Section v1.0.1 by releasing it before it should have been and the result was that WF-S v1.0.1 unstable. I knew it at the time but I released it anyway.
Anyway, to the actual point here. When I was at the head of the module development team, I was the one of the member who believed that the separation of the different departments of XOOPS would only benefit XOOPS Members.
The fact is a development site for XOOPS and module developers would help bring together developers more and help share idea's, resources etc etc that would otherwise get bogged down in users plea's for help etc.
Before I created X-Mode and had the fundamental structure going, XOOPS Module developers where on their own and scattered all over the place. Each developer was talking their own path and nothing was co-ordinate. This would mean that each module was written, designed and a lot of modules would use functions, classes and object that where already available to them via the XOOPS Core.
Now what is happening here is that many developers are getting involved in either asking questions or answering them and talking more interest in how to use these core functions and that could only be a good thing for the users out there.
The whole idea is 'Getting the correct information' to the 'correct people' and making sure that the information 'flows'. The fact is this, this site and forum, is used by many beginners, non-coders and people wanting quick answers to their questions and they do not want to have to 'wade through tons of 'geek' talk and developers showing off their latest coding skills (that 70% of people probably don't understand and don't want to understand).
But to be honest, I think that the separation has gone too far, and this causes 'thinning' of information that need not be and thus makes it want harder for everyone to find.
I see no point in having the arsenal that is on the 'Dev' site just to start using source forge as well, a bad idea in my option. Strangely enough, many of the developers would not have three of four functions or classes to do more of less the same thing, yet it has been done here.
Also I feel that the Module, Theme and Documentations sites could have been one site only, thus making it a whole lot easier to manage and for users to find the 'thing' they are looking for easily.