I would be glad to get an email address: malferov@php.net I filled out this form PHP: Using Git for PHP Development about 6 months ago and hoped that an email would be created during this time. Perhaps the request was lost somewhere in the universe and the wait was in vain. So I'm trying again
Maybe someone on the mailing list knows who to contact to get things moving forward?
I would be glad to get an email address: malferov@php.net I filled
out this form PHP: Using Git for PHP Development about 6 months ago and
hoped that an email would be created during this time. Perhaps the
request was lost somewhere in the universe and the wait was in vain. So
I'm trying again
Maybe someone on the mailing list knows who to contact to get things
moving forward?
First, you don't need a php.net account to maintain any doc repository;
this is completely handled on Github now, to my knowledge.
Actually, I think nowadays php.net accounts are only useful to (a) have
a respective email alias, and (b) to have voting karma for RFCs. The
latter is somewhat controversial, and I don't know how that has been
handled recently. Maybe someone else can comment on that.
Frankly, it would be nice for me to look at the faces of my colleagues, to whom I would inform my new prestigious work email: malferov@php.net
05.09.2024 14:44:51, Christoph M. Becker пишет:
Hi Mikhail!
On 05.09.2024 at 13:12, Mikhail Alferov wrote:
I would be glad to get an email address: malferov@php.net I filled
out this form PHP: Using Git for PHP Development about 6 months ago and
hoped that an email would be created during this time. Perhaps the
request was lost somewhere in the universe and the wait was in vain. So
I'm trying again
Maybe someone on the mailing list knows who to contact to get things
moving forward?
First, you don't need a php.net account to maintain any doc repository;
this is completely handled on Github now, to my knowledge.
Actually, I think nowadays php.net accounts are only useful to (a) have
a respective email alias, and (b) to have voting karma for RFCs. The
latter is somewhat controversial, and I don't know how that has been
handled recently. Maybe someone else can comment on that.