Actually, the name will come first because I plan to set this up on a
virtual server, but that's a minor point. More below.

On Sat, Mar 21, 2009 at 10:59 AM, Alexander Wagner
<[email protected]> wrote:
>> 2) Where the wiki can shine, I think, is in providing a
>> place where a) enthusiasts can contribute and b) things
>> that don't exactly fit into the "official
>> documentation"--whether because they are digressions,
>> tutorials, tips and tricks, etc-- can be shared in a
>> central location.
>
> Keep in mind not to hook off the current community. There
> should be a way where I can see what's going on without the
> necessity to point my webbrowser to the page. At least if
> you want comments from my end to a question. Probably you
> don't ;)

I don't understand. Are you talking about web feeds here or hooks into
Scid's documentation? Can you clarify?

>> 3) The official scid docs remain where they are.
>
> Given proper setup of the wiki one could easily add a simple
> url call to the end of each chapter in Scid that points to
> the Wiki section. I think, just for this the wiki pages
> should map somehow to the online docs.

OK

> MySQL docs are IMHO a good model.

Sure.

> Agree, and the most important thing IMHO is that the editor
> is usable and simple. === is really not simpler than <h2>.
> None of the users should have to  fiddle with this kind of
> "simplicity". (Having a sandbox for a Wiki is synonymous to
> say "we failed" before even getting started...)

Well, this could be a problem. I'm not aware of a wiki engine that has
a *good* WYSIWYG editor nor one that uses HTML code. And certainly
none that have a WYSIWYG editor and provide chess markup. Do you have
suggestions? The best wikis I have evaluated (not hosted elsewhere and
free and/or open source) use wiki markup.

c
--
Chris Lott

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