Timeline for Answering by suggesting editing an open-source external library
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
16 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oct 31 at 11:19 | comment | added | john Smith | open source lives from contribution. Also datatables has ways to write plugins for that, the more reusable your change is for others, the better. | |
Oct 31 at 8:01 | answer | added | Sayse | timeline score: 0 | |
Oct 30 at 21:04 | answer | added | Peter Cordes | timeline score: 5 | |
Oct 30 at 8:22 | history | edited | Mark Rotteveel | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
no need to prefix a question that it is a question, removed use of excessive bold
|
Oct 30 at 7:59 | comment | added | Gimby | @NVRM you are talking about the act of doing it, not about whether it would make a valid Stack Overflow answer or not which is the subject of this meta post. | |
Oct 30 at 7:58 | comment | added | NVRM | <It's more than ok, in my opinion.> Both helping others, yourself, and the library creators to improve the situation, to later provide tested tools. Also by now, Github require an account and a registered phone, just to leave a message about a bug in whatever random library. Very bad move, but what to expect from Microsoft. | |
Oct 30 at 7:34 | comment | added | NoDataDumpNoContribution | For an answer you probably want to demonstrate that it works. So you have to make the change yourself, not only suggest it. In that case, at the very least, publish your change (a fork for example). | |
Oct 30 at 1:03 | comment | added | JaMiT | If I change "answer suggesting editing" to "edit of", I get the question "Is it ok to submit an edit of the source code of an open-source external library (like datatables.js) to solve an issue?" to which the answer is (typically) an emphatic "yes", with the understanding that you would now be submitting to the library, rather than to Stack Overflow, and thereby helping others in the same situation (without them having to look for your solution)... | |
Oct 29 at 23:19 | comment | added | Andras Deak -- Слава Україні | The good thing about open-source external libraries is that you can try putting that feature into the library. Takes more work, and a lot more thinking about the problem, and then it still might be rejected for whatever reason, but that approach is far more future-proof than hacking a local copy of the library. | |
Oct 29 at 23:15 | history | became hot meta post | |||
Oct 29 at 19:26 | answer | added | John Montgomery | timeline score: 18 | |
Oct 29 at 14:47 | comment | added | Hordrist | It was more of a "Is is frowned upon to do so ?" question, so both your answers are helpful, thanks ! Based on your second answer, I guess the code edit and its effects should be thoroughly examined before suggesting it. Also should the answerer remind the asker that their solution might have side effects, and that the edit should be tracked and mentionned somewhere. | |
Oct 29 at 13:46 | comment | added | yivi | what do you mean by "is it ok"? Is it a "valid" answer by the site's rules? Yes. It's generally a good idea to suggest to edit vendor code in place? Usually not. | |
Oct 29 at 13:28 | history | edited | Wai Ha Lee | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
added 3 characters in body; edited title
|
Oct 29 at 13:27 | history | edited | Abdul Aziz Barkat | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Remove awkward "Lastly" at the beginning of the question
|
Oct 29 at 13:24 | history | asked | Hordrist | CC BY-SA 4.0 |