Curating a Kata
This article is meant to explain how to ensure a kata is high quality before it leaves the beta state, and after it's accepted.
Beta process and working with beta kata
Some of the steps are available only after earning the required privilege, but every user can help reviewing a kata in some way.
Attempting the Kata
Training on a kata and solving it is the first step to verify its quality, but also a very effective one. Reading through the description, users can check if it's clear enough, or something needs to be reworded or explained in a clearer way. When tests are run, reviewers can verify if they are sufficient, or whether assertion messages are clear and easy to understand. Users can check whether their experience with the kata meets all expectations. When any issues are found, users can raise issues or suggest changes in the kata discourse.
When the kata is successfully solved, the user unlocks further steps of the review process.
Satisfaction vote
Users with sufficient privileges are able to vote on kata quality. They can cast one of three possible votes:
- Satisfied
- Somewhat satisfied
- Not satisfied
If you think the kata itself is valuable but you simply have some issues with it, then you should select "Somewhat" and create an issue instead. If you thought the kata is really great, other than the issues, then you can choose "Very". Please do not choose "None" simply because the kata has an issue but it is otherwise a good kata. The satisfaction rating is meant to indicate quality of kata as a concept, not its current state of condition in terms of open issues which can be fixed.
Difficulty rating vote
Kata author assigns initial difficulty rank estimation to their kata, but they do not decide on its final rank. Difficulty rank is estimated from votes cast by users who solved the kata while it's in beta phase. This means that every user who solved a beta kata can give their own opinion on its difficulty, helping in determining its final rank.
Review
Before a beta kata is accepted and becomes available for users to train on, it needs to be reviewed and determined whether it holds up to Codewars quality standards. When reviewing a beta kata, users can perform the following steps:
- Reading the code and description.
- Running the tests against a couple of solutions, to verify if the test suite gracefully handles some unexpected answers and eventual crashes of the solution, or if assertion messages are clear enough, etc.
- Reading the comments to check if there are any remarks from other reviewers and whether they still hold or were addressed appropriately.
- Verifying if the kata holds to kata authoring guidelines.
After a review is completed, the reviewer can finalize it with one of the following actions:
- Leaving a properly labeled comment with remarks, suggestions and issues which should be addressed by the author.
- Fixing problems found during the review, if privileges allow.
- Approving the kata, if it fulfills all required conditions (see below).
Users performing a review should hold to Kata Curating Guidelines.
Review comments
When a reviewer writes a post pointing out the spotted issues which need to be fixed, it should be done in a way which actually instructs the author how to fix them. Sometimes, authors can be unaware that some specific issue might occur, or why it might be a problem, and reviewers with their short remarks leave them even more clueless. When a reviewer wants to signal such an issue, it should be done in a way which minimizes the need for follow-up questions and additional explanations. Initially it might seem as more effort from the reviewer, but this additional effort may ease the resolution of problems further down the line.
Reward for Reviewers
Reviewers earn an additional 2 honor for every Beta Kata they solve, in order to reward them for taking the risk of solving a Kata with potential issues. Then, leaving a satisfaction vote and rank assessment on said Beta Kata grants 1 extra honor each, in order to reward the reviewer for taking the time to leave valuable feedback on said Kata. Finally, if the Kata is approved, the reviewer will also receive the honor and rank progress for the official Kata. Therefore, it is in everyone's interest to leave the satisfaction vote and rank assessment on every completed Beta Kata.
Kata Approval
After a kata has received enough approval votes from the community, all issues are fixed, and the community reached a consensus on its ranking, it's ready for the final step to come out of beta. At this point, sufficiently privileged users can enter the kata editor, assign its rank, and release it as an official kata onto the site!
Kata retirement
After a kata gets retired, it's removed from a pool of beta kata and can neither be completed nor approved anymore. All users who completed it keep their points, but the kata itself is not listed anymore and can be accessed only by direct links. Retirement is final and cannot be undone.
Maintenance
When some problem with a kata is identified, it should be reported as an Issue or Suggestion, so it could be tracked and eventually fixed. Some kata, especially ones created a long time ago, can have some issues or suggestions which are still pending, but have been already fixed or are not applicable anymore because the kata has changed. It's very helpful when such old issues are reviewed and marked as resolved if they are not valid anymore. It can also happen that there are posts in the kata discourse which report some problem, but are not labelled appropriately. It's generally a good idea to re-raise such issues as new posts with the correct label, as it should help other users to find them and eventually fix them. Sufficiently privileged users are encouraged to fix any reported problems and improve the quality of affected kata whenever possible.