89 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
89 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
From rssfeeds@jmason.org Thu Sep 26 16:34:02 2002
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<jm@jmason.org>; Thu, 26 Sep 2002 16:28:29 +0100
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Message-Id: <200209261528.g8QFSTg24435@dogma.slashnull.org>
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To: yyyy@spamassassin.taint.org
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From: joelonsoftware <rssfeeds@spamassassin.taint.org>
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Subject: We're trying to decide if FogBUGZ 3.0 should support custom
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fields. Histor
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Date: Thu, 26 Sep 2002 15:28:28 -0000
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Content-Type: text/plain; encoding=utf-8
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URL: http://www.joelonsoftware.com/news/20020912.html
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Date: Not supplied
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We're trying to decide if FogBUGZ[1] 3.0 should support custom fields.
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Historically, I am opposed to custom fields in principle, because they get
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abused. People add so many fields to their bug databases to capture everything
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they think might be important that entering a bug is like applying to Harvard.
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End result: people don't enter bugs, which is much, much worse than not
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capturing all that information. You can always "page fault" to get the
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information if the original report forgot it. Rather than having a field in
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every bug where you enter the version numbers of every DLL on your machine
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(this is an actual customer request), information which is likely to be
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relevant only for a tiny percentage of bugs, why not just have the
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programmer-assignee look at the bug first, and if they think it might be
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dll-version-related, only _then_ bounce the bug back to the originator asking
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for the DLL info? Similarly, it's always tempting to add a field in which you
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ask for the OS version in which the bug occurred. This sounds logical, but
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trust me: adding fields like this is guaranteed to do one thing and one thing
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only: reduce the number of bug reports that get into the system in the first
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place. Only a small percentage of bugs are really OS dependant and you can
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always include that info in the text description of the bug if it happens to be
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relevant. (But then how do you search for, say, all bugs which only happen on
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Windows 98SE? Aha! You can't. Ever. Even with the custom field. Because not
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every bug has been regressed on every version of every operating system, so
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this search doesn't make sense in the first place. The info wasn't captured. Do
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a full text search for 98SE and you'll find some of them. Life is imperfect.)
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Life would be more perfect if every bug report included megabytes of
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information -- a complete dump of every byte on the hard drive and in RAM on
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the computer in question and while you're at it, a photograph of the tester's
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workspace. But the goal of a bug tracking database is to _keep track of bugs_,
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which, all else being equal, takes priority over making it easy to find them. I
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have heard countless stories of development teams where the bug tracking
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package was so high-ceremony that people were afraid to enter bugs in the
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system, because they didn't know what all those fields were. The _real_
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bug-"tracking" happened in email, post-its, and hallway conversations. Great.
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A pretty common question we get on the customer service line is, "does
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FogBUGZ support custom fields?" Rather than giving our usual answer ("no. on
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purpose.") over the last few weeks I've been saying, "can you please tell me
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what fields you would need? We're trying to decide whether to implement that
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feature in 3.0 and we want to know why people need it." The interesting thing
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is, almost all of the fields people ask for _are already in FogBUGZ,_ and the
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other ones, in my educated opinion, shouldn't be fields. And in fact, our
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existing customers are certainly happy without custom fields. One of our
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biggest site licenses was sold to a semiconductor company, and I myself wanted
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to add a custom field for them to keep track of versions of the circuit design,
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but I didn't, and they never needed it (even though they had been keeping track
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of it with the old bug tracking package which had custom fields), and they are
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happy and keep buying more site licenses.
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But the dilemma for us is that many customers are evaluating bug tracking
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software and they consider the lack of custom fields to be a major weakness in
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our product. "Gosh, even Filemaker has custom fields." Righto. It's true. And
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who am I to tell my customers they are wrong? One person who I was talking to
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yesterday would have used a custom field for something that we already have a
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built-in field for. This would have made their database confusing and
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inconsistent and would have definitely caused more problems than it solved. But
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it's still rude of me to tell customers that we don't have that feature _for
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their own good_, even though it usually is, and we're losing some sales because
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of it.
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Sigh. I guess we could have a custom fields feature but hide it and make it so
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hard to use that people don't use it. At least we won't lose any sales :)
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[1] http://www.fogcreek.com/FogBUGZ
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