primary votes: these are the reason for an RFC, must achieve 2/3 majority secondary votes: these are to resolve unimportant detail in the rfc, may achieve 50%+1 quorum: minimum 12 yes votes for primary vote
Honestly this is partly the trouble with our completely open model. We probably need to have more consensus on smaller details than a different model might.
I think it's always debatable, and someone will always debate it, even if it isn't ... trying to define what it is, and have 3/4 of people agree to it ... I'm not sure if this is doable ...
but I can't see another criteria we could use
anyone else ?
do we have any document anywhere that attempts to describe in any detail what a bc break is ?
I know phpdbg can do it, not sure if that's what you're talking about though
@Levi why are additional warnings not bc breaks ?
I'm trying to figure out what exceptional cases to a simple rule like "A backwards incompatible change is a change which effects the behaviour of code without modification" are ...
wait that's too simple
but we want to start from some simple place, and then explain acceptable exceptions, I think
John Carpenter: Fear Is Just the Beginning... The Man and His Movies (2004) [ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1121029/ ] - Chronicles the work of cult director John Carpenter through interviews with… [♥ 7.2] Celluloid Apocalypse: An Interview with John Carpenter (2006) [ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0795918/ ] - [♥ 7.1] Working with a Master: John Carpenter (2006) [ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0791360/ ] - [♥ 6.3]
There are quite a bunch of great proposals which are quite close.
Or also, typed properties. Sure, they're not uncontroversial and people may disagree, but I doubt we'd ever be able to get a 75% majority behind this - just because a fair share of people disagree with some semantics and then a few others do not see their vision of PHP matched.
Requiring a too high consensus may hinder progress.
@JoeWatkins @Levi … please don't overshoot. … Anyway, what are your arguments in favor of 75%? Are there instances where 2/3 supermajorities decided very wrongly [in general]? And a 75% vote would have prevented it?
i think like it is now is fair enough but 75% is way too high. did you check now many of recent years rfc would not have passed with 75%?
apart the obvious sth
unrelated: did you read my rfc, bob? i have just one question i can't answer myself as i have no idea about internals. is that a trivial implementation, right? my guess would be yes, but it's just that, a guess. (link gist.github.com/Netmosfera/200c5e923f34cbc00cdb31224d730de8)