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> If it were just a list of defects, this discussion wouldn't have started.

This makes for the second time this week I've run into someone stating the obvious and thinking that it makes for a point in their favor and not one against their end of the argument.

> Obnoxious is not in the comment I replied to. You've projected that. The maintainer in that scenario may have been replied politely. The only issue under discussion was the submitter's reaction to a maintainer thinking the submitter wanted something. Are you sure you're not strawmanning and counterfactualising?

Yes, I'm sure, and I don't really have time or the wherewithal to explain in depth to someone who's dead set against not understanding. "The maintainer in that scenario may have been replied politely" is simply not a move that's available to you. There is no "may" when we're discussing _actual_, _concrete_ events and not hypotheticals. (Even in the case of hypotheticals, it's a problem—counterfactuals are not an argument unless the argument it opposes employs the universal quantifier; failure to understand this is a failure to understand the difference between what it means to say "∃x" and what it means to say "∀x".) There is only what did or did not occur (or what is or is not posed). To repeat: it is not your job to imagine the most convenient circumstances that would weaken the side that you're arguing against.

> And these lessons are? If you think it's nuts, it would be nice if you were to offer useful solutions.

I've offered them. Go back and read my comments in this thread and you'll see them. Read your own comments—it'll suffice to read just what you've written in this one—and the solution follows naturally from the problem you describe. If it's so hard to discriminate between "informational bug reports" and support requests, then stop mixing them. If you're going to run a bugtracker, then run a bugtracker[1].

> Netscape's corporate strategy doesn't seem relevant here.

You're right. So I don't know why you focused on it at length, as if you can talk your way into it being the thing that I was referring to. Once again, a move that's not available to you.

1. https://hyp.is/de25lAXAEeuhNEN0wan1Ww/news.ycombinator.com/i...




I agree with some of your observations and ideas, btw. But I have to wipe the antagonism off my screen with a strong disinfectant to appreciate them.

This comes to mind: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24674099

> There is no "may" when we're discussing _actual_, _concrete_ events and not hypotheticals

We're not.

I replied to the comment I replied to, nothing else, and it describes a hypothetical, so the reply does too.

> counterfactuals are not an argument unless the argument it opposes employs the universal quantifier; failure to understand this is a failure to understand the difference between what it means to say "∃x" and what it means to say "∀x".

:eye-roll: My job is with theorem-proving software. You can show off knowledge of quantifiers but it's unlikely to impress.

The specific comment I replied to (not the main discussion topic as you assumed) has the informal discourse equivalent of an implicit universal quantifier.

> Netscape's corporate stratgy [...] I don't know why you focused on it [...] as if you can talk your way into it being the thing that I was referring to.

You hand-waved vaguely about "Netscape" and "lessons", giving no direction as to what you meant while insinuating we should all know them. The lack of clue sounded like a communication choice, thus intentional shorthand for "you know what I mean".

That leads a good-faith correspondent naturally to a speculative reply, to which you could politely respond with "no that's not what I meant, sorry for the ambiguity". I think it's unlikely you'll see that as rational, but it's how informal language works, otherwise it's questions all the way down.


> This comes to mind: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24674099

You each lob a bunch of antagonistic comments in my direction and somehow expect that you shouldn't have to deal with someone who's bothered in turn and who opts to drag you through your own tedium. You might find that surprising, but you shouldn't.

> unlikely to impress

It was a straightforward rundown of why it was unsound to push the argument you were pushing and your failure to acknowledge that, even after having already pointed it out once before. I truly do not give a goddamn about impressing you. (Although it'd be nice if you reflected on how annoying it has been to carry out this conversation in this way.) This will be my last reply.

> The specific comment I replied to (not the main discussion topic as you assumed)

As _I_ assumed? Who's setting the stage for discourse? It's not you.

> you could politely respond with

Oh, gee. My apologies for inconveniencing you while you're barraging me with a thousand hypothetical tangents that could be true instead of demonstrating the "common sense and ordinary charity"[1] of a "good faith correspondent".

> it's how informal language works

And during the barrage, where your justification for it focuses on the particular way that I worded a restatement of the premise n comments deep, but where I failed to sufficiently qualify it by exhaustively restating all the constraints to affirm that they are, in fact, relevant and in play, you think you're in a position to hand out lessons about "how informal language works". Great.

> You hand-waved vaguely about "Netscape" and "lessons"

Nope. That comes from the comment where I referenced Netscape's triage process for the very first time. It's called an allusion at that point—I didn't make a claim about it, get pushback on it from you, and then handwave it away. And if at that point you want more detail about the thing alluded to, then, yeah, you can ask for it, but if you go on to be as discourteous as to derail with another annoying strawman—after having already been called on it once—then you shouldn't expect me to respond as if I'm dealing with anything other than a bad faith correspondent wasting my energy with the level of tedium you're dragging me into. So, given that, and given how excruciating this has been, I'm not going to deliver those details, nor wrap it in a bow.

Here's some stuff that you can Google if you actually do give a shit about any of this and weren't just looking for some avenue to throw away time as part of a vaguely social activity:

"Life Cycle of a Bug", UNCONFIRMED, INVALID, INCOMPLETE

1. https://pchiusano.github.io/2014-10-11/defensive-writing.htm...




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