-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 12.8k
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Unstable Book Updates needed #57224
Comments
|
I think we need to rethink the unstable book altogether. Every time I have gone to it, it has been... unhelpful. Usually, I just end up reading the tracking issue anyway. Perhaps what we want instead is an automatically generated index of features... something like a table a like this:
Though maybe the status is better left to the tracking issue unless we can find a way to update it automatically... |
Yeah, that seems to be the issue in the ones I looked at. If we think of it as source code, the Unstable book depends on those tracking issues. But because there's no checking of the tracking issues, the source code becomes outdated and defective. |
@mark-i-m i have also felt like the unstable book is not meeting its goals. I would be open to the idea of a single page, with the feature names and tracking issues. Furthermore, the unstable book was made a book with the idea that it could be where documentation lands before the feature does, but given the new changes to the rfc process that @nikomatsakis and others have been talking about, if those changes go through, there will be a new place for them to live, de-ephasizing the "book" nature of the unstable book all together. |
I’m curious if you think that should be done as part of broader RFC reform or as its own measure? |
Specifically, I think that any successful process reforms will need to include heavy automation to scale well. |
Closing this issue after brief discussion in lang backlog bonanza. It doesn't seem like this is driving any real improvement here. Today the unstable book appears auto-generated, at least for lang features, which likely means we have at least a page for each item. If we want to drive more meaningful content, I think we likely need either automation or better process around updating these pages -- we're generally not great about documentation updates, particularly for unstable features, but it seems like that's something we're slowly trying to do better on (e.g., see lang initiative work). Connecting language unstable features to their initiatives seems like an OK thing to do. I think the primary value in pulling this info out of tracking issues is likely better searchability, as well as encouraging more documentation-y vs. comment-y writing. That does seem valuable to me. |
Mostly listing parts of the book that need work, need tracking updates, etc.
Taking a break, will add more later.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: