In my experience, bugs that start out unassigned never end up getting triaged, and thus fixed (granted, a small sample size).
I realize that someone *could* work on a bug that's unassigned. Adam On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 6:14 PM, Thiago Macieira <thiago.macie...@intel.com> wrote: > On Tuesday 09 June 2015 12:49:02 Adam Light wrote: > > Hi > > > > There's a bug report (https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-46546) that > I'm > > interested in but it is unassigned. I assume that the component chosen > had > > nobody set as the automatic assignee. Could someone with the appropriate > > permissions assign the bug so it can at least be triaged. > > Bugs don't need to be assigned to be triaged. > > Assigning is only required when someone takes responsibility for fixing it > (usually when they start doing it or they know that they will work on it > soon[ish]). It's an indication to others that they don't need to look into > fixing this issue. > > Unassigned issues are open to anyone for fixing. > -- > Thiago Macieira - thiago.macieira (AT) intel.com > Software Architect - Intel Open Source Technology Center > > _______________________________________________ > Interest mailing list > Interest@qt-project.org > http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest >
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