Clean up some weird parts of the site.

This commit is contained in:
Jordan Bancino 2022-09-06 11:53:38 -04:00
parent c0474982a6
commit 8b68bb089c

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@ -58,11 +58,6 @@ database. This has a number of advantages:
<li>
It allows <b>Telodendria</b> to run on systems with fewer resources.
</li>
<li>
It provides both runtime and data safety and stability. Since no
database is running, there's fewer things that could go wrong because
there's a lot less code running on the system.
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>
@ -708,9 +703,7 @@ don't get lost.
<h3 id="developing">Developing</h3>
<p>
The primary language used to write <b>Telodendria</b> code is ANSI C.
Yes, that's the original C standard from 1989. The reason this standard
is chosen, and the reason that it will not be changed, is because the
original C is the most portable. Other languages you'll find in the
Other languages you'll find in the
<b>Telodendria</b> repository are shell scripts and HTML. If you have
any experience at all with any of these languages, your contributions
are valuable. Please follow the guidelines in this section to ensure
@ -1071,25 +1064,7 @@ licenses involved.</li>
After the headers, but before the checkbox, write a more thorough
description of the patch and why it was created. Then, send the
resulting patch file to <code>#telodendria-patches:bancino.net</code>,
so it can be discussed and reviewed by the community. If you don't
have a Matrix account, and you <i>really</i> don't want to create
one&mdash;ignoring how odd it is that you are trying to contribute
to a <i>Matrix</i> homeserver project&mdash;you can email your
patches to <a href="mailto:jordan@bancino.net">jordan@bancino.net</a>.
However, the preferred way of submitting patches is to the official
Matrix room, so I will upload your patch there along with your email
address. If you are going to send patches via email, <b>they must
be plain text</b> emails, and the patch must be in the main body
of the email. No MIME, base64, or printed-quotable garbage. I will
silently reject emails that are not purely plain text. I should be
able to write a raw copy of your message to an <code>mbox</code>
file, and then apply it onto my code right from there, with no
further processing. If you're going to be a regular contributor,
it would just be easier to create a Matrix account. It doesn't have
to be on my public homeserver, but it certainly can be. Note that
the discussion and ultimately the decision on what to do with your
patch will all happen in the Matrix room, so if you submit patches
using email, you'll miss out on any feedback.
so it can be discussed and reviewed by the community.
</p>
<p>
Try to keep your patches on topic&mdash;make one patch file per feature