At Sun, 15 Jan 2006 01:01:38 +0300,
Sergei Steshenko wrote:
Documentation by itself is of no interest, i.e. if a developer
wrote a document, but no end user has access to it/knows where
to find it, then for end users the document effectively does not
exist.
What I know from my past experience is that a proper procedure
should be established.
That is, if developers agree to write documentation, they should also
agree on a way of publishing it on the web site, and in such a manner
the web site will be maintained.
So, would you suggest Linus to maintain a dedicated web site for
Linux? :)
IMO, the maintainer of web pages doesn't have to be the developer who
wrote the documents. They are different works. Of course, a dense
communcation is necessary between them, though.
Takashi
-Original Message-
From: Lee Revell [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Sergei Steshenko [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 13 Jan 2006 23:12:35 -0500
Subject: Re: Re[2]: [Alsa-user] Alsa problems
On Sat, 2006-01-14 at 07:06 +0300, Sergei Steshenko wrote:
The logical idea is that the one who wrote a piece of code also
maintains documentation for it.
The documentation for the code is already maintained. Maintaining the
web site is a different issue.
Lee
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