12 Apr
2018
12 Apr
'18
5:33 p.m.
On Tue, Apr 10, 2018, at 12:14 AM, Mark Sapiro wrote:
If you are comfortable with 2), I think that's the better option. After PyCon in May when we release 3.2 and the rest of the suite, you should be able to install everything with pip and have it work. I'm not sure what the issues are now with a pip install.
Thanks, Mark. It wasn't clear to me by poking around how stable/unstable the master branches were, but if you think they should be stable enough for a hobby server, that's good enough for me.
If I get things working and I'm feeling bold enough to contribute back to the documentation, are there guidelines? The Contributor Guide covers the technical stuff... should I just submit a merge request in GitLab?
-- Ben