3:57 PM
@TylerH (cc @rene) That note is from me. It was part of cleaning up from having some of the columns on the Review page sorted while others were left in their original sort order. That partial sorting made for some confusion when the page was sorted again. So, I put all of the columns in the same sort order and adjusted some of the formulas to account for it and possible sorting of all columns later. I was supposed to clean that up a few months ago, but kept forgetting/procrastinating.
One of the columns that didn't take into account that there were two sort orders was the assignment of who reviewed each line. The assignment was intended to be made based on the question ID mod 10. However, it was actually made off of some semi-random ID mod 10. However, the use of the question ID was effectively just a static random number (i.e. the ID was used just for the distribution of the numbers to get a reasonably equal distribution of assignments).
Effectively, the assignment of someone to the question was made based on a random number, but it wasn't the random number which was intended. If we are re-assigning the questions to different people, then we can go ahead and use the actual question ID for the random number. That can be done by changing Review!$AH1 to TRUE (that control really should be in a different location).
@Machavity If we're wanting to update the lines on the Review sheet to reflect the current status of each question as to open/closed/deleted, and tagged with [burninate], [retag], [synonym], [status-completed], [status-declined], [status-review], [status-norepro], [status-deferred], [status-planned], [status-reproduced]) then that's something I can do relatively easily in bulk, as was originally done on 2018-07-17. I should be able to do that later today.
Doing so does take some time, as it is only partially automated. If we want it to be kept up to date in near real-time, then automation would be good, or people will need to keep manually updating each line as status changes. The above auto-assisted method of updating was used because it was relatively easy for infrequent bulk updates (i.e. it was a cost trade-off at that time of adapting already available tools vs. full automation).
@Machavity If it makes working with the data easier for people, I'm certainly open to having the data stored in a different format (e.g. in Rodgort), or just a new spreadsheet, if we want to preserve the data in this sheet as it currently is. The spreadsheet was used because that was what we had that didn't take much development time. If we're in a different place, then it's reasonable to choose to use something else.