You and a friend are both new graduates. You've worked through your student years at the same company, but on different projects.You leave that job to take another.Your friend takes over your old project. Your friend has no experience in the framework or language of the project other than some tutorials she did in anticipation of taking over. No one else at the old job knows much about it, either. You do not tell your friend that you didn't use the default server to run your project; it just slipped your mind. You don't leave any documentation about the specific customization, though you do document which plug-in you used to set things up. You do spend three or four hours together during your last week going over the project, though an hour of that time you couldn't resist implementing an improvement you just thought of, while your friends sits and watches you.
You have lunch with your friend during the first week of your new job, during which you realize the confusion your friend is experiencing is due to the customized server setup you created (your server is still running with your checked-out copy of the code, and she'll have to set up the server to run with her copy of the code). You tell her about that and tell her which plug-in you used. Your friend has no experience with servers in general, much less this plug-in, and asks for more details. You're not too sure of the details yourself, you just messed around with the plug-in until you got it working and now you don't remember. You put her off a couple times over the next week. She keeps asking for help. You finally tell her you're too tired from your new job to think about this old stuff, and she should just figure it out on her own. She now feels you really left her in the lurch and she's having a hard time not taking it personally.
Did you leave her in the lurch? Should you have done more? Do you owe the specific person who takes over your project more than you owe the company that is no longer paying you? What if the friend offered to pay you, either in cash or in kind? What if you don't know the person who took over, or only in passing? Does the relationship change the professional responsibility? What is your professional responsibility, and how long do you carry it, and how do you handle inadvertent omissions you discover after you've left?
Edit: I am the one who took over. The question was asked in this format in order to encourage answers from the other perspective. I already know what I think about the situation, but maybe I'm not being objective.
