I grumped at @MartijnPieters about several problems. He said talking to me wouldn't be productive (I think lack of productivity can be a property of more than one party's attitude in a conversation...and I'm getting annoyed at having to mirror all my SO posts due to random deletion risk).
But he did suggest the se-quality-project
. So here is one aspect of my concerns, regarding the feature-request
tag.
On Meta.SO the tag has 1,658 entries.
On Meta.SE the tag has 3,818 entries
There are status-* tags:
status-completed
status-bydesign
status-declined
status-norepro
status-deferred
status-planned
status-reproduced
If you look only at the status-*
tag counts, they actually look pretty favorable. But when you start doing intersections with feature-request
vs. "bug", the picture becomes a bit more grim.
From above, on Meta.SE there are 3,818 feature requests. How many have been formally declined? 14. How many have been completed? 60. By design? 2. There are 6 that were deferred, and 20 have been planned.
For Meta.SO the picture for the 1,658 is similar. 77 declined requests. 69 completed. 2 deferred. 1 planned.
Tags don't tell the whole story. I'm sure someone with SE-data-explorer-fu can paint a more precise picture than that does. But it is troubling to me, when there is a volunteer army of idea-givers providing suggestions, getting crickets on this stuff.
e.g. why is it--exactly--that an easy crowd-sourced idea with 52 votes (much easier to implement than hats or StackEgg) has never been given a fair shake, much less an administrative "we will or won't" or why?
Pre-flight screening checklist for first/early posts--adaptively pick three items, tune with metrics
How is it that for over a year, a trivial suggestion on an 11 upvote post that suggests fixed-width replies in chat...hasn't been commented on, or said "why we won't/can't" or set any expectations? The result is a kind of feeling of powerlessness, in a network service analog to the lamentations in "Why Software Should Be Free".
I propose a time window under which all feature-requests be given a status, officially. A month is a bit long, but we have to start somewhere...so how about that? If declined, say why (hopefully as an answer so that it can be elaborated well enough to explain). If planned, say more-or-less when and give people a way to bring it back up. (The bounty system has been killed on meta, so some option needs to be available for a status-planned
that's overdue to bring it back up.)
[status-declined]
tags. Is that really your intent?[status-declined]
tags. Is that really your intent?" That sounds pretty good to me, actually. A prompt "no" is better than indefinite ambiguous silence.[feature-request] [status-completed]
Queries are dynamic and site-specific of course. As I said, maybe someone else's fu is better than mine in the study here, but I was challenged about my assertion that the queue had piled up to the point where it seemed pointless to make suggestions... so I used what tools I had to make my case.