> The linked article specifically mentions that a specific soundness issue had been found and a fix had been submitted as well.
True, but I (and I think the other comments) referred to the top level comment here, which is a guy who just felt the code was smelly and avoided it, without having discovered anything specific.
> Your tone suggests that you don't want any part of this, so you continue along that path.
Been there, done that. The amount of excuses and other bullshit is not worth my time and effort. If the project is on github I still do open issues providing repro or at least a stack trace if possible. But if you have your own bug tracker where I'd need to sign up first (most likely going through email verification) you've lost me. Same for when you start requesting I do a git bisect even though I provided steps to reproduce or start giving excuses for why this isn't an actual bug and I'm holding it wrong. I'll just stop replying immediately.
True, but I (and I think the other comments) referred to the top level comment here, which is a guy who just felt the code was smelly and avoided it, without having discovered anything specific.
> Your tone suggests that you don't want any part of this, so you continue along that path.
Been there, done that. The amount of excuses and other bullshit is not worth my time and effort. If the project is on github I still do open issues providing repro or at least a stack trace if possible. But if you have your own bug tracker where I'd need to sign up first (most likely going through email verification) you've lost me. Same for when you start requesting I do a git bisect even though I provided steps to reproduce or start giving excuses for why this isn't an actual bug and I'm holding it wrong. I'll just stop replying immediately.