On Apr 7, 6:21 pm, Russell Keith-Magee <freakboy3...@gmail.com> wrote:
> James spoke with me about this decision at the time, and I completely
> agree with and endorse his actions.

So be it then.

> While it is true that wikis contain all sorts of information, often
> unofficial, the naming of the wiki pages in question --
> DjangoSpecifications/Core -- conveyed a *very* strong signal that the
> information contained was official in some capacity. Regardless of the
> merits of the information on that page, the simple fact remains that
> it *isn't* official, and it *wasn't* vetted or edited by anyone in the
> core.

The naming was an unfortunate mistake that dates back two
years-ish when I was trying to advocate supplementing the
mailing list discussions (that tended to be much lengthier
and more diffuse as Django was still much in flux back then)
with specification pages on the wiki (that usually tend to
coalesce to clear, to-the-point documents faster) --
inspired by Python's PEP process. Although I failed horribly
back then, I'm glad that everybody writes them nowadays
without much bravado and high ritual ([1], [2], [3], ...).
That's clearly the best way to do it.

The ill-named location doesn't render the information less
valuable in my opinion. I've referred to the review on
several occasions myself, also, Graham links to that page
from
http://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/wiki/IntegrationWithDjango
. But, evidently, I may be biased (being the "author").

> If you think there is some valuable information in the wiki pages that
> were deleted, then you need to turn that information into either
> tickets in Trac, or a draft for addition to the official
> documentation. If you think there is some information on that page
> that doesn't fit into the official locations that Django currently
> provides, then we need to have a meta-discussion around the right
> place to house information of that sort.

Although I personally would like to see a wiki section that
collects all the fine technical documents already referred
to above ([1], [2], [3], ...) + unofficial "internals" docs
in the vein of the threading review, I believe no-one will
step up to compile one. So let it be.

Best,
MS

P.S. What about
http://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/CollaborateOnGithub
that I have been maintaining? Should that also be maintained
outside of Django wiki?

[1] http://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/Signing
[2] http://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/CsrfProtection
[3] http://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/ReplacingGetAbsoluteUrl

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