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Please make it easier to write comments #827
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I'm not sure a Comment on GitHub link would be an improvement, since anyone wanting to leave a comment would still need to know the formatting rules, etc. My concern is that leaving such a link without further instructions would invite more arbitrary editing of the files... On the other hand, if that happens, I can always just decline the pull requests... Would that be an improvement? I'm not sure, but I'm willing to run that experiment... |
You can phrase it something like this: This way you still point the readers to the guidelines while make it easy to go directly to editing if you're already familiar with them. IMHO this would definitely be an improvement. |
Happened to stumble across this while considering making a comment. You might be interested in using Giscus for comments. I've really enjoyed it so far. The basic premise is that it uses (a locked-down category of) GitHub discussions. Someone logs in via their GitHub account, and is able to post on the related discussion (one topic per thread). Includes preview of markdown formatting, configurable ability to add reactions, etc. What I like the most is that it keeps the content on GitHub, and I'm not forced to rely on a 3rd party application to hold the data. I'm already all-in on hosting via GitHub, so it seemed a natural extension. Some balk at requiring a GitHub account, but I figure that offers me some ecosystem-level protection against bad actors while lowering the bar for being able to make a comment. If you're interested in this, I'd be happy to take a whack at implementing it in your Jekyll blog, as a way of saying thanks for the great content over the years. Feel free to check the implementation on any of my articles, e.g. https://seankilleen.com/2022/06/announcing-net-oss-survey-results. For historical articles, I did go through and copy the past comments into an initial comment. I figure that's a conversion that could be done incrementally for those places on your blog where historical comments exist. |
@SeanKilleen, thank you for writing. Suggestions like that comes up from time to to. Please see my answer to one of them. For reference, here are a few similar suggestions: |
@ploeh fair enough. Your comment above from July seemed to indicate your main concerns were:
Your other points in your links are of course fine trade-offs to choose; it's your space. For me it ends up being about "barrier to entry" level for comments. I felt I might have had something to contribute, but skipped it because I didn't feel like direct editing a file in a custom way and submitting a pull request (given that the link at the bottom of the post about comments doesn't link to the file I'd need to edit). That may be entirely in line with how you feel about comments on your blog and you may even find it to be an effective filter for anything other than highly-motivated commenters who understand PRs. 👍 If you are interested, I'd be happy to submit a PR to update the text and make the comment link an edit link for the file where someone can propose a PR. If not, no worries and I'll consider this closed on my end. |
Thank you, that's an interesting experiment. I'm happy to try it, but I'll roll it back if it turns out that it generates too much noise. |
Writing a comment on your excellent blog posts is very combersome. It starts with finding the relevant article in GitHub (after I was already at the blog post itself), goes through finding the correct place and syntax to add the comment, editing the comment as markup, and then going through the process of creating a PR...
At the very least, a direct link from each post to its corresponding GitHub file (in edit mode) would be very beneficial.
Consider that I (and I bet that many others) usually read your posts from a smartphone, going through this process really turns me down from taking the effort to write comments.
Thanks in advance,
Arnon.
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