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[debbugs-tracker] bug#22698: closed (ls-quotes: ls output changes consid


From: GNU bug Tracking System
Subject: [debbugs-tracker] bug#22698: closed (ls-quotes: ls output changes considered unacceptable)
Date: Thu, 13 Dec 2018 20:24:02 +0000

Your message dated Thu, 13 Dec 2018 13:23:31 -0700
with message-id <address@hidden>
and subject line Re: bug#22696: ls output changes considered unacceptable
has caused the debbugs.gnu.org bug report #22696,
regarding ls-quotes: ls output changes considered unacceptable
to be marked as done.

(If you believe you have received this mail in error, please contact
address@hidden)


-- 
22696: http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=22696
GNU Bug Tracking System
Contact address@hidden with problems
--- Begin Message --- Subject: ls output changes considered unacceptable Date: Tue, 16 Feb 2016 11:50:28 +0100
Hello,

There are some software changes that are simple accidents resulting in
bugs; folks find them, fix them, and all is well. Then there are
intentional changes, which don't affect functionality, but instead
change _essential aesthetics_. These are much more alarming issues,
the kind of issues that get under your skin, that disrupt your
relationship with the terminal, as though you suddenly woke up and all
your countrymen but not you spoke with a hardly comprehensible accent.
It's a shock, a disruption, a psychological chasm. And, when such a
change is made in software considered "core", by a single individual
unilaterally without extremely wide consultation of the larger
community, it is clear that a grave an unacceptable thing has
happened. The recent change to ls (commit 109b922) must be reverted
immediately, a new package version released, and only after large
multi-distro discussion might a similar change be made.

There are, of course, benefits from having multiple output modes, with
varying levels of escaping. Such options are well received. Changing
the default, however, is not. The commiter's suggestion of "use option
XYZ to get the old behavior back" does not appreciate nor respect the
subtleties an expectations of ls output, something best looks somewhat
similar on most machines, without the need for intense configuration,
aliases, or global environment variables.

We don't want those single quotes. We don't care about their
alignment, their coloring, their triggers; we simply do not want them.
There are so few people who actually want this feature, it's appalling
it would be made the default. Distributions across the community are
in the midst of working around this calamitous new change. There is
not a single community that has a majority of users who prefer it.
Every numerical method of determining desirability, whether its
electoral, condorcet, majoritarian, or even meritocratic, fails to
find any desire for this change.

So, please, do the sane and responsible thing: revert 109b922, release
a new version, and then start a community wide discussion, and see
where you get. Any discussions that are currently occurring, while
109b922 is not reverted, are don't done on a legitimate basis.

Thanks.



--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message --- Subject: Re: bug#22696: ls output changes considered unacceptable Date: Thu, 13 Dec 2018 13:23:31 -0700 User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.3.0
Hello,

On 2016-02-17 9:46 a.m., Mike Hodson wrote:
On Tue, Feb 16, 2016 at 6:45 AM, Bernhard Voelker <address@hidden> wrote:
On 02/16/2016 11:50 AM, Jason A. Donenfeld wrote:
[...] We don't want those single quotes.


We created a summary of common issues and FAQ
regarding the quoting change in ls(1):
  https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/quotes.html

If there is an issue that is not addressed there,
please send an email to address@hidden .

regards,
 - assaf


--- End Message ---

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