On 09/15/2018 09:07 AM, Tyrell Jentink wrote:
A wiki is used for community driven documentation; You could easily use a
Google Docs document to achieve a similar task; Or maybe you write the
documentation into your code, and use a parser to spit out an HTML5 based
website with just the comments, publish the whole lot to GitHub; Or maybe
you scribble notes on to a legal pad, and pass the legal pad around at
meetings...

I'm asking as a reader looking background/overview not potential author.
One of my long term goals is an alternative to a "Frequently Asked Questions". My awkward working title "Question Which Should be More Frequently Asked". FAQ looks better than QWSMFA ;/




On Sat, Sep 15, 2018, 06:16 Richard Owlett <rowl...@cloud85.net> wrote:

On 09/15/2018 07:28 AM, Russell Senior wrote:
Yes.

OK ;/ What might it be?



On Sat, Sep 15, 2018 at 3:53 AM, Richard Owlett <rowl...@cloud85.net>
wrote:

There are multiple carriers of information on the internet.
Mailing lists and USENET groups stress timeliness.
Wikis by nature can be more in-depth but can suffer from edits from
edits
by anyone independent of qualifications.

I repeat my question. Is there an alternative to wikis.
The question is explicitly community and/or topic agnostic.


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