Quick tip on the 'patterns'. Have a look at Wikipedia's policies. These policies dictate things for all articles (though some may be ignored). Disputes are resolved by citing policies, and if something is wrong, the policy needs to be changed, not just the article. This creates a unified user experience while keeping the process completely open.
If you set your patterns up like this within the Drupal community, the can evolve openly, but there's still a central guideline for the Drupal UX.
Quick tip on the 'patterns'. Have a look at Wikipedia's policies. These policies dictate things for all articles (though some may be ignored). Disputes are resolved by citing policies, and if something is wrong, the policy needs to be changed, not just the article. This creates a unified user experience while keeping the process completely open.
If you set your patterns up like this within the Drupal community, the can evolve openly, but there's still a central guideline for the Drupal UX.
riskone1 2 years ago