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Thanks for opening this discussion, @Rumyra. I think, a good first step is to inquiry, whether the labels get used at all. |
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As mentioned elsewhere, I've been doing a kind of out-of-band labeling of issues to help identify those that are relevant to particular spec / group / org : https://dontcallmedom.github.io/mdn-issue-by-spec/ via https://github.com/dontcallmedom/mdn-issue-by-spec/ My motivation for this tool is that it's much easier for me (and I expect many others) to watch issues on which I know I can bring useful input than to watch the firehose of issues covering any Web platform related topic. In the Web Platform Tests project (which has similarities with MDN in its Web-Platform wide scope and its potential needs of expertise for many different topics), this kind of information is maintained directly in the repo via labels. If my use case of classifying issues along the line of specs or groups has a broad enough appeal, I would be happy to adapt my tool to make it set labels on the repo. |
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As it stands new issues are processed initially by adding the
needs-triage
and content area labels (Content:JS
Content:CSS
etc...)This then allows a defined team of issue triagers to come in and add more information about the issue, so eventually contributors can pick them up and 'fix' them. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/MDN/Contribute/Processes/Content_bug_triage for the full process.
The initial process is currently done by a human, when in fact it probably doesn't need to be. Labels can be automatically assigned when a new issue is raised. There's also cases we don't account for with the initial labels:
Things to discuss in regards to the initial labelling of issues:
Sticking this here too for reference:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/MDN/Contribute/Fixing_MDN_content_bugs
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