-
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 228
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
2020-1006: [Divergent definitions of terms] #101
Comments
@r-scotti I generally look at proposed definitions (or ones in PRs suggesting changes) and compare them to definitions elsewhere, discuss them with our other English editor and other people I know, before I submit my review. Sometimes this discussion takes place in comments on the PR itself, if the other parties are the other editors. But I can't speak for all of the editors, and I've only been part of the team for six weeks, or so. If you want to discuss specific definitions prior to submitting a PR, an issue named specifically for the term in question would be a good place to start. Tagging me might be a good next step. I agree that the Wolfram definition you cite is better. And I don't like that the current Glossario one is venturing an opinion. |
Good evening.
Thanks for writing. I more or less understood the procedure you follow to
reach consensus.
I tried to transfer my comment to a GitHub issue, Hope I correctly
understood your suggestions.
Sincerely, Roberto Scotti
…On Fri, 8 Jan 2021 at 20:28, Bailey Harrington ***@***.***> wrote:
@r-scotti <https://github.com/r-scotti> I generally look at proposed
definitions (or ones in PRs suggesting changes) and compare them to
definitions elsewhere, discuss them with our other English editor and other
people I know, before I submit my review. Sometimes this discussion takes
place in comments on the PR itself, if the other parties are the other
editors. But I can't speak for all of the editors, and I've only been part
of the team for six weeks, or so.
If you want to discuss specific definitions prior to submitting a PR, an
issue named specifically for the term in question would be a good place to
start. Tagging me might be a good next step.
I agree that the Wolfram definition you cite is better. And I don't like
that the current Glossario one is venturing an opinion.
—
You are receiving this because you were mentioned.
Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
<#101 (comment)>,
or unsubscribe
<https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AEAKXDZ2P35OTVAOPDEQUMLSY5MEFANCNFSM4SFY7G4A>
.
--
Roberto Scotti
<https://scholar.google.it/citations?hl=en&user=EgZYcIAAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate>
- Nuoro Forestry School
<https://www.facebook.com/NuoroForestrySchoolUniSS/>
Dip. Agraria <https://www.uniss.it/ugov/person/2496> - [email protected] ORCID
iD <https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7394-4473> Publons
<https://publons.com/researcher/1104101/roberto-scotti/> IRIS
<https://iris.uniss.it/cris/rp/rp02644>
--
--
*Dona il 5x1000* all'Università degli Studi di Sassaricodice fiscale:
00196350904
|
See Issue #267 for discussion of Absolute Error definition. |
The general issue is "how to reach consensus on terms definitions".
Just as a tiny example, in my appreciation, the term 'absolute error' is better defined in this Wolfram page than here
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: