(Btw, I blame gmail for the mangled title ;-) -- it's been doing some weird
stuff recently on Safari for me; but only in the subject line. I think
there were backspace characters in an edit that weren't applied.)
The permuted indices are interesting. It means really committing to the
style/naming conventions, doesn't it? In common lisp, hyphen separated
names and I guess camel-case for Haskell. Though you could split on
underscores *or* camel case...
I think multiple ways of indexing the data never hurts (except by confusing
the user a bit). On that common lisp page I especially like how they've
indented the words. Frankly I'd like a search box in any interface that
displays more than two thingamajigs. That should be a UI commandment.
I was expecting the objection of wasted server bandwidth for very large
indices. I wasn't so worried about the client (even mobile) case. People
can always press escape if a load takes too long. And it only happens if
they manually drill down into All. Perhaps a good idea would be to follow
the convention used elsewhere http://svnbook.red-bean.com/ and have a link
with a size warning -- All Entries (1.6 MB HTML). That should keep people
from clicking on it with their smartphone :-). I can tweak it again to do
that if people like.
Cheers,
-Ryan
On Sun, Oct 24, 2010 at 8:15 AM, Thomas Schilling
nomin...@googlemail.comwrote:
For packages with many items in the index, these pages can get a bit
huge. How about a permuted index like
http://www.lispworks.com/documentation/HyperSpec/Front/X_Symbol.htm?
E.g., for your use case, you would go to E and then the row with all
the End entries, which would contain all the names with End
anywhere in their name.
I don't know if page size can be a problem, but at least for mobile or
otherwise low-bandwidth devices this can be a nice alternative.
On 24 October 2010 04:41, Ryan Newton new...@mit.edu wrote:
When I encounter a split-index (A-Z) page it can be quite frustrating if
I
don't know the first letter of what I'm searching for. I want to use my
browser find! For example, tonight I wanted to look at all the functions
that END in Window in the Chart package -- no luck:
http://hackage.haskell.org/packages/archive/Chart/0.13.1/doc/html/doc-index.html
Therefore I propose that even when generating the A-Z individual pages
that there also be an All option for the single-page version. Attached
is
a patch against haddock's HEAD (darcs get
http://code.haskell.org/haddock/
right?) that implements this behavior. As an example, here is FGL's
documentation built with the patched haddock:
http://people.csail.mit.edu/newton/fgl_example_doc/doc-index.html
The great thing about hackage being centralized is that if people are
happy
with this fix it can be widely deployed where it counts, and quickly!
Cheers,
-Ryan
P.S. At the other end of the spectrum, when considering a central index
for
all of hackage (as in the below ticket) maybe it would be necessary to
have
more than 26 pages, I.e. Aa-Am | An-Az or whatever.
http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/hackage/ticket/516#comment:6
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