Difference between revisions of "How to Comment"
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'''Steps''' | '''Steps''' | ||
− | : 1. Hover your mouse over the left hand margin of the text you are interested in commenting on and you'll see a little green speech bubble | + | : 1. The URL for CodeNEXT LDC comments is https://codenext.civicomment.org/ |
+ | : 2. Hover your mouse over the left hand margin of the text you are interested in commenting on and you'll see a little green speech bubble | ||
::* a green bubble with a (+) will appear on paragraphs that don't have comments yet | ::* a green bubble with a (+) will appear on paragraphs that don't have comments yet | ||
::* a green bubble with a number will appear for those that do have comments | ::* a green bubble with a number will appear for those that do have comments | ||
: 2. Click on either green bubble and it opens a comment form in the right margin. | : 2. Click on either green bubble and it opens a comment form in the right margin. | ||
− | : | + | : 4. If someone has already commented on that section of text, their comments will appear at the bottom of this comment form. |
: 4. Make your comment | : 4. Make your comment | ||
: 5. Choose your comment type | : 5. Choose your comment type |
Latest revision as of 20:36, 4 June 2017
Steps
- 1. The URL for CodeNEXT LDC comments is https://codenext.civicomment.org/
- 2. Hover your mouse over the left hand margin of the text you are interested in commenting on and you'll see a little green speech bubble
- a green bubble with a (+) will appear on paragraphs that don't have comments yet
- a green bubble with a number will appear for those that do have comments
- 2. Click on either green bubble and it opens a comment form in the right margin.
- 4. If someone has already commented on that section of text, their comments will appear at the bottom of this comment form.
- 4. Make your comment
- 5. Choose your comment type
- 6. Click “Add Comment”
Tips on Commenting
- Offer to help. Help them test ideas, provide constructive feedback, offer to testify at a hearing, brings friends, gather a group to consider the proposal and bounce ideas off of eachother.
- If you can explain why something doesn’t work, show that and back it up.
- If you want to raise a question, offer your version of a fix as well. For example, “I don’t understand why you do X, that would mean Y. Wouldn’t it be better if Z?”
AURA’s sample comments
- Click on the topics below and look at the comments under “Recommendations” for each topic of the code text. Feel free to use these as your own comments.