Hi Robert,
My idea is that this could evolve into a large set of tutorials. Every header
in the TOC would be a separate tutorial, responsible for teaching a osg concept.
Each tutorial will have the one markup file containing the "lesson" and then
the corresponding source code as separate files.
Hi Björn,
Thanks for your efforts on the tutorials. I had a quick look at what
you have done so far, but am not yet clear how you are thinking it
might evolve. I noticed both .md and .html files, are both something
that will be maintained?
On 19 November 2017 at 21:18, Björn Blissing wrote:
>
As I said in my previous email. There is only one example tutorial right now.
The first one in the basic category: "basic geometry"
The rest is as you say only a TOC.
I haven't checked readthedocs yet. It may be an option. But I like markdeep for
its feature set.
Regards
Björn
Den 20 nov. 2
Hi.
I can't see any tutorial. It's just a Table Of Contents. I guess at
least one tutorial is necessary to evaluate navigation.
As a side note, https://readthedocs.org/ hosts lots of docs with a
nice navigation, so this might be an option.
On 20 November 2017 at 00:18, Björn Blissing wrote:
> Hi
Hi Robert et al,
As said earlier, I have started to experiment with GitHub pages. I discovered
that it was hard to support both single-page and multi-page documents using
markdeep (since its limited support for included documents). So having a
single-page and multi-page document at the same tim
SMesserschmidt wrote:
> Hi Eon,
> Do you have issues with any of the tutorials inside the books?
> The only structural changes I recall is the promotion of the
> geode/drawable hierarchy and some changes regarding the callbacks. But
> maybe Robert can shed some light on the potential breaking ch
robertosfield wrote:
>
> I don't have a problem with video tutorial's, but as you say if API's change
> then videos need to be re-shot, but then other resources have to be redone
> anyway. If one can make vidoes in a lightweight way then the cost of videos
> might not be too high.
The probl
Hi Eon,
Hi,
Slightly off-topic, I started learning and using OpenSceneGraph end of last
year, by using OpenSceneGraph 3.0 Beginner's Guide and OpenSceneGraph 3
Cookbook as my tutorial sources. It has been 5 years since the books were
published. It will be nice if there are updated version o
Hi,
Slightly off-topic, I started learning and using OpenSceneGraph end of last
year, by using OpenSceneGraph 3.0 Beginner's Guide and OpenSceneGraph 3
Cookbook as my tutorial sources. It has been 5 years since the books were
published. It will be nice if there are updated version of the books
Hi Björn,
On 16 October 2017 at 18:34, Björn Blissing wrote:
> First of all Michael Kapelko's tutorials looks amazing. He must spent a
> lot of time producing these. One problem though is that they do not specify
> any permissive license. Another problem is that they are in video form and
> thos
Hi,
First of all Michael Kapelko's tutorials looks amazing. He must spent a lot of
time producing these. One problem though is that they do not specify any
permissive license. Another problem is that they are in video form and those
are hard to change if anything needs changing (other than rere
Hi Guys,
Using gihub to host tutorial makes a lot of sense. I'd be happy to create
an OpenSceneGraphTutorial repository on the OpenSceneGraph github account
and then grant write permission to those who would like to pitch in.
I don't think the old tutorial on old OSG website would be a good star
Chris Hanson wrote:
> I like the idea, assuming we can link them to the main site without problems.
>
Well, I have little experience on integrating GitHub pages to other sites.
Maybe there is a simple way to import github markdown documents that could be
integrated into the main site.
Chr
I like the idea, assuming we can link them to the main site without
problems.
But it still means people need to set that up, and migrate/update the
tutorials.
And I'm not hearing much response on that.
Come on people, this is something that significantly helps the community,
that you yourself p
Hi,
One idea could be to move the tutorials section to GitHub. That is creating a
new github repository under the OpenSceneGraph account. We already have the
OpenSceneGraph-Data repo, why not create a OpenSceneGraph-Tutorials repo?
Each tutorial gets its own folder, which stores both the tutor
Hi all. Some of you may have noticed the TRAC site being down recently.
Jordi just resurrected it (again), but it needs to be retired. The current
OSG site is built in Joomla.
About the only thing still hosted on the TRAC site is the old Tutorials:
http://trac.openscenegraph.org/projects/osg/w
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