https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=168918

--- Comment #6 from Buovjaga <[email protected]> ---
(In reply to Danat from comment #5)
> (In reply to Buovjaga from comment #4)
> > (In reply to Danat from comment #3)
> > > (In reply to fpy from comment #2)
> > > > Please be more specific in filling in the form and attaching relevant 
> > > > files
> > > > here.
> > > > 
> > > > see https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/QA/BugReport#Good_reports
> > > 
> > > Respectfully, there seems to be no way to file a bug in a way that would
> > > satisfy you. There is always something you don't like about it
> > > 
> > > Who do you think you are? I made a video and gave you the file. Is that 
> > > not
> > > enough?
> > > 
> > > I gave you the video to watch and the file in case you might need it
> > 
> > A video can provide an additional look at an issue, but you should describe
> > enumerated steps to reproduce the problem.
> 
> I gave those steps in other reports, and he still didn't approve them. In my
> opinion, those steps can sometimes create more confusion than understanding
> 
> If I read the steps, most of the times, I will have no clue about the issue.
> But if somebody showed me - that would give me much more understanding.
> Spoken language is not good at conveying software bugs

I've triaged something like 15 thousand reports here and elsewhere and I
disagree. Written steps are fine and don't create confusion, if written in a
simplistic way. Long and rambling texts do create confusion, though. Images and
videos may enrich reports, as I said. The point is how quickly others get the
idea. An image will be quicker than a video. An image can show how something
looks bad while a video can show how something behaves badly. A video can be
like a long text, frustrating to go through while waiting to get to the point.

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