
OK, I put a section at the top saying that, and then summarizing the process for people who are familiar with the tools. I also updated the last list to say that you should add a link to the rendered version and how to do it. On Tue, Oct 4, 2016 at 8:40 AM, David Luposchainsky via Haskell-prime < haskell-prime@haskell.org> wrote:
On 04.10.2016 01:27, Iavor Diatchki wrote:
During our Haskell Prime lunch meeting at ICFP, I promised to create a detailed step-by-step guide for creating Haskell Prime proposals on GitHub. The instructions are now available here:
https://github.com/yav/rfcs/blob/instructions/step-by- step-instructions.md
Please have a look and let me know if something is unclear, or if I misunderstood something about the process.
The target audience for this document is someone who is unfamiliar with Git and Github, which we should make clear at the beginning. As an experienced user, it left me searching for relevant information among all those sub-lists to find out that it really just is about opening a pull request containing a template. We might provide a link to the document in the process section [1] of the current README if others think this amount of detail helps lowering the barrier of entry.
One thing we should also mention somewhere is to please provide a link to the rendered version of the proposal in the ticket, because Git diffs are in a very reader-unfriendly format.
Greetings, David
[1]: https://github.com/yav/rfcs/tree/instructions#proposal-process
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