Since probably most of the other contributors, like me, got into this project via your presentations at multiple Haskell-hackathons, it would maybe be a good idea to not only create some guidelines for contributions (to give a bar for code quality since most are maybe, like me, beginners and are rather producing confusing code which on top is not readable as well :) ) but maybe also to create a space (somewhere, Slack, Discord?) for discussions.
Especially the space for discussions and progress would be interesting since currently most of the stuff happens in the slack/discord spaces of the specific hackathon.
I just randomly file this issue, since I asked myself if you have been hacking on MuniHac (which I was unable to attend) and made any progress :).
Ok, will do that. I am currently working on the system as I use it in a current project in the company for testing. Still it goes always different than planned...
Since probably most of the other contributors, like me, got into this project via your presentations at multiple Haskell-hackathons, it would maybe be a good idea to not only create some guidelines for contributions (to give a bar for code quality since most are maybe, like me, beginners and are rather producing confusing code which on top is not readable as well :) ) but maybe also to create a space (somewhere, Slack, Discord?) for discussions. Especially the space for discussions and progress would be interesting since currently most of the stuff happens in the slack/discord spaces of the specific hackathon.
I just randomly file this issue, since I asked myself if you have been hacking on MuniHac (which I was unable to attend) and made any progress :).
Feel free to delete this if this does not fit :).