Reword a few things in the explanation around our `Feature request process` to make the process a little clearer. PR Close #41977
		
			
				
	
	
		
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			56 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.5 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
| <a name="conversation-locking"></a>
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| # Automatic conversation locking
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| Closed issues and pull requests are locked automatically after 30 days of inactivity.
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| 
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| ## I want to comment on a locked conversation, what should I do?
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| When an issue has been closed and inactive for over 30 days, the original context is likely outdated.
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| If you encounter a similar or related issue in the current version, please open a new issue and
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| provide up-to-date reproduction instructions.
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| 
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| ## Why lock conversations?
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| Automatically locking closed, inactive issues guides people towards filing new issues with updated
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| context rather than commenting on a "resolved" issue that contains out-of-date or unrelated
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| information. As an example, someone may comment "I'm still having this issue", but without
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| providing any of the additional information the team needs to investigate.
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| 
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| <a name="feature-request"></a>
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| # Feature request process
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| 
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| To manage the requests we receive at scale, we introduced automation in our feature request
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| management process. After we triage an issue and we identify it as a feature request, it goes
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| through several steps.
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| 
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| ## Manual review
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| 
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| First, we manually review the issue to see if it aligns with any of the existing roadmap efforts. If
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| it does, we prioritize it accordingly. Alternatively, we keep it open and our feature request bot
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| initiates a voting process.
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| 
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| ## Voting phase
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| 
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| To include the community in the feature request process, we open voting for 60 days. Anyone can cast
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| a vote for the request with a thumbs-up (👍) reaction. When a feature request reaches 20 or more
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| upvotes, we formally consider the feature request. Alternatively, the bot closes the request.
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| 
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| ## Consideration phase
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| 
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| If the feature request receives 20 or more votes, we verify the Angular team can afford to maintain
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| the feature and whether it aligns with the long-term vision of Angular. If the answers to both of
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| these questions are yes, we prioritize the request, alternatively we close it with an explanation of
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| our decision.
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| 
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| ## Diagram
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| 
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| <p align="center" width="100%">
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|   <img src="./images/feature-request-automation.png" alt="Feature Request Automation">
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| </p>
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| 
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| ## What if I want to implement the feature to help the Angular team?
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| 
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| Often implementing the feature as an separate package is a better option. Building an external
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| package rather than including the functionality in Angular helps with:
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| 
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| - Keeping the framework's runtime smaller and simpler
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| - Makes the learning journey of developers getting started with Angular smoother
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| - Reduces maintainers burden and the complexity of the source code
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