Thanks, everyone knows they have a weird coc. It obviously only applies to the maintainers/members of the project though and is more of a statement than something that is actually enforced. As a convinced atheist, I also find it pretty weird but see absolutely no reason at all to avoid sqlite because of that. What matters is: Code quality/correctness (which is absolutely superb when it comes to sqlite) and license, of course. Why would I care about the authors beliefs? They don’t even directly benefit from me using their product.
It doesn’t even apply to the members of the project. It’s St. Benedict’s rule, and only chapter 4 of it, relating to the life in a monastery, but “No one is required to follow The Rule, to know The Rule, or even to think that The Rule is a good idea.” It has a whole bunch of good advice for living in a community, interspersed with religion. But if you work together on a project, “be not lazy” is not a bad suggestion. Nor is “Be a help in times of trouble”. Many of those concepts have been proposed in other religions or social contracts all over the world. And it cannot be taken too seriously: “Speak no useless words or words that move to laughter”
As for programmers: Respect your seniors. Love your juniors.
Thanks, everyone knows they have a weird coc. It obviously only applies to the maintainers/members of the project though and is more of a statement than something that is actually enforced. As a convinced atheist, I also find it pretty weird but see absolutely no reason at all to avoid sqlite because of that. What matters is: Code quality/correctness (which is absolutely superb when it comes to sqlite) and license, of course. Why would I care about the authors beliefs? They don’t even directly benefit from me using their product.
@words_number @Sibbo that was one hell of an opening sentence to misread.
It doesn’t even apply to the members of the project. It’s St. Benedict’s rule, and only chapter 4 of it, relating to the life in a monastery, but “No one is required to follow The Rule, to know The Rule, or even to think that The Rule is a good idea.” It has a whole bunch of good advice for living in a community, interspersed with religion. But if you work together on a project, “be not lazy” is not a bad suggestion. Nor is “Be a help in times of trouble”. Many of those concepts have been proposed in other religions or social contracts all over the world. And it cannot be taken too seriously: “Speak no useless words or words that move to laughter”
As for programmers: Respect your seniors. Love your juniors.