On Wed, Dec 10, 2014 at 10:11 AM, Ben Peters <Ben.Peters@microsoft.com>
wrote:
> Works for me. Does the wiki send email when there are updates?
>
>
>
I can't figure that out just by taking a quick look a the docs. Do you want
to do a quick edit to a wiki page and those of use watching the repo will
tell you if we got notifications?
>
> *From:* Ryosuke Niwa [mailto:rniwa@apple.com]
> *Sent:* Wednesday, December 10, 2014 10:09 AM
> *To:* Olivier Forget
> *Cc:* Ben Peters; Johannes Wilm; Frederico Knabben; public-editing-tf
> *Subject:* Re: Default Caret and Selection Positioning Spec?
>
>
>
>
>
> On Dec 10, 2014, at 9:56 AM, Olivier Forget <teleclimber@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I agree with everybody that it seems things get forgotten too easily and
> that there are too many discussions going on at once.
>
>
>
> Github Issues alone aren't really enough because without an existing
> document to create an issue against, they're basically just email threads
> in a different place.
>
>
>
> Ben, would you consider creating a crude "caret handling" text file on
> gitHub? This would:
>
> - list all the things that we need to address
>
> - central go-to reference for what the latest thinking of the group for
> each, along with links to emails or issues where discussed.
>
> - things not yet addressed are clearly marked as such
>
>
>
> Please use the GitHub wiki instead
>