Rosetta Code:Village Pump/Old draft tasks: Difference between revisions
Rosetta Code:Village Pump/Old draft tasks (view source)
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:Do we want to, in effect, move some of the list of suggested tasks into abandoned task pages with just as much information in them? --[[User:Paddy3118|Paddy3118]] 05:14, 12 May 2011 (UTC)
:: Actually, that's more or less what I'd like to see, with the caveat that we can identify when tasks are abandoned and have free license (in a social sense) to reformulate them into something more useful and/or interesting. The 'custodian' idea was intended as way of explicitly identifying who had that license, and as a way of clarifying whether or not a task is truly abandoned. (If a task transfers custodianship, then we can ask the new custodian. If the new custodian doesn't ceases to take interest in the task, then the custodianship can transfer again) --[[User:Short Circuit|Michael Mol]] 14:07, 12 May 2011 (UTC)
::: How about an <nowiki>{{abandoned task}}</nowiki> tag? It would facilitate changing draft task to abandoned task with an easy edit. Maybe even by a bot. It should also throw up a big warning box. --[[User:Dgamey|Dgamey]] 13:18, 27 May 2011 (UTC)
:::: Sounds reasonable. I'd probably want to change the name to {{tmpl|unmaintained task}}, though. --[[User:Short Circuit|Michael Mol]] 16:55, 27 May 2011 (UTC)
:Is this a case where it would help if we got the thoughts of long-term members of much larger wiki's? (Is there a meta wiki wiki)?
:--[[User:Paddy3118|Paddy3118]] 05:14, 12 May 2011 (UTC)
:: I really don't know. I can think of arguments either way, as usual. However, I'll ping this page out on the twitter and Facebook accounts; we might conceivably get more input that way. Could also set up things like Doodle and Facebook polls. --[[User:Short Circuit|Michael Mol]] 14:07, 12 May 2011 (UTC)
::: Concerning people not adding solutions to ''draft tasks'': One reason (for newbies) is that they might not know about draft tasks; I know I didn't for some time. Another observation I've noticed is that, once a draft task becomes a (full) task, then people start to add solutions. Another reason is that (I for one) hate to spent time and effort in adding solutions to draft tasks and then have the draft task deleted without so much as a how-do-you-do. Another concern is that some tasks really push the practical limits of executing a computer program that runs a long time before results are generated (or found). Not everyone has a super-fast PC or a PC with a large amount of real storage. There hasn't been a large number of these, but they have been becoming more frequent. It used to be that these types of solutions were for "stretch goals", but they seem to have been more common as of late, and I don't like to implement a solution that doesn't meet the primary requirements (least it gets flagged as not meeting the task's requirements). The last time I discussed/talked about the difficulty in meeting a requirement (even after the author himself asked if the goal was a bridge-too-far), my thoughts on the matter were rebuked, so that approach didn't get very far. So I suggest, ask for achievable results such that it is solvable for almost any computer programming language. -- [[User:Gerard Schildberger|Gerard Schildberger]] ([[User talk:Gerard Schildberger|talk]]) 20:14, 24 December 2020 (UTC)
:::: I've done a fair few draft tasks, but left others aside. From at least my personal experiences, some of the reasons people might not do draft tasks are:
::::* It's too difficult.
::::* It's written poorly and is hard to understand.
::::* It is too memory and/or time intensive to be worth the effort.
::::* It isn't interesting to me.
::::* The task itself is fine but the output formatting requirements are unnecessary and annoying.
::::* Any solution I could write would be too long.
:::: Of course, many of these issues apply to some actual tasks as well. But I think part of the reason draft tasks languish with draft status is the same as the reason we don't attempt the tasks they describe: we look at it, don't know what to do with it, and move on. And it doesn't help that a lot of the drafts were put here by one-time users who then never returned to curate them. [[User:Thebigh|Thebigh]] ([[User talk:Thebigh|talk]]) 06:49, 25 December 2020 (UTC)
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