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From the article:

> There is no obligation to free labour. Every hour you put in working on your project for free is a gift to the world. If the world comes back to you and says "You are a bad person for not supporting this thing I need you to support" then fuck them. If they want that they should pay you for it, or do it themselves.

I've had my Javascript canvas library "side project" on GitHub for seven years. In those 7 years I've had exactly ONE issue opened - which then got closed when the person who raised it worked out for themselves how to solve the problem they'd encountered.

Instead, people email me their questions - maybe a dozen of those over the years. They're usually really simple questions on how to do this or that using the library. I ask people to open an issue on GitHub for their question (because other people might find whatever answer I come up with useful) ... then I never hear from them again. I like to assume they solved the issue for themselves and don't need my help; others may choose to interpret the facts differently.

So I'd actually welcome people raising issues. It shows me that my "side project" is more than vanity, that people find it useful. And it would help improve the library because I can't think of every use-case or edge-case myself.

... But whatever happens, I'll still continue working on the library: some compulsions are beyond cure!



what's the side project?





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