
Sometimes I see threads briefly go into topics that are unrelated to new features in Python. For example: talking about a writer’s use of “inhomogeneous” vs “heterogenous” vs “anhomogenous.” We get what the original author meant, there is no need to fiddle with the little details of language at this point, even if it is fun. These extra emails, though harmless, impose a visual, time, and navigational burden on the readers of the thread. It’s okay if the problem is little but not if it’s big. Two questions: How often does off-topic discussion occur? Does it need to be find ways to reduce the amount? How can we find ways to reduce the amount?

On 08Feb2019 17:15, James Lu <jamtlu@gmail.com> wrote:
Conversations always branch. We try, thoguh self discipline, to keep things on topic. If you're going to diverge morethan transiently there are a few decent ways to deal with it: - edit the subject, indicating the old subject, for example: "inhomogeneous vs heterogenous (was: former subject header)" so that readers can easily identify the branch and follow/ignore it - commence a new discussion (like your post) - pointedly take it offline; mostly suitable when the topic is off topic for the list and the participants are few (ideally just 2) - take it to another suitable list (and of course say so so that interested people can follow); this has its own downsides because the other list isn't necessarily one used by everyone who cares I lean to the first of these, at least initially. It is less intrusive and makes the shift evident. Cheers, Cameron Simpson <cs@cskk.id.au>

I'm trying to not be snarky here, but frankly, these "meta-conversations" about how and what we should discuss on the list are more distracting to me than the occasional OT wanderings ... -CHB -- Christopher Barker, PhD Python Language Consulting - Teaching - Scientific Software Development - Desktop GUI and Web Development - wxPython, numpy, scipy, Cython

On 08Feb2019 17:15, James Lu <jamtlu@gmail.com> wrote:
Conversations always branch. We try, thoguh self discipline, to keep things on topic. If you're going to diverge morethan transiently there are a few decent ways to deal with it: - edit the subject, indicating the old subject, for example: "inhomogeneous vs heterogenous (was: former subject header)" so that readers can easily identify the branch and follow/ignore it - commence a new discussion (like your post) - pointedly take it offline; mostly suitable when the topic is off topic for the list and the participants are few (ideally just 2) - take it to another suitable list (and of course say so so that interested people can follow); this has its own downsides because the other list isn't necessarily one used by everyone who cares I lean to the first of these, at least initially. It is less intrusive and makes the shift evident. Cheers, Cameron Simpson <cs@cskk.id.au>

I'm trying to not be snarky here, but frankly, these "meta-conversations" about how and what we should discuss on the list are more distracting to me than the occasional OT wanderings ... -CHB -- Christopher Barker, PhD Python Language Consulting - Teaching - Scientific Software Development - Desktop GUI and Web Development - wxPython, numpy, scipy, Cython
participants (3)
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Cameron Simpson
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Christopher Barker
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James Lu