Thank you all for starting this vibrant thread. I wanted to address some 
concerns about this book.

Concern #1. Who is it for?
This book is for librarians, administrators, students and others who are 
interested in programming. If you have been programming for some time this book 
may not be for you but you might contribute.

Concern #2. What chapters will be included? The call was meant to be read as 
open and flexible. Please contact us if you feel you have something to 
contribute. We already have had a great response and about ten chapters / 
topics have interested authors. We are getting to the point where we will have 
to group authors and turn away suggested topics. 

Yes, we imagine XML-like content will be in. Yes, PHP and MySQL will be in it 
also. What else will be in it? It may not have your favorite language but the 
book is not meant for just one person.

Concern #3. What is the structure? The structure will address the history and 
some of the nuts and bolts mentioned by others on this thread. Books are 
limited by space constraints but we hope to make the book have some longevity 
and connection to the larger field.

Concern #4. What is the approach? The approach follows the traditional LITA 
guide approach. It looks at specific cases in libraries and guides readers on 
how to address problems in specific ways. Good programmers still may find this 
book useful because they may see projects or code they want to port to 
different languages.

Concern #5. Basic are you kidding me?!? It is not for me to judge who uses what 
programming lang. If a library or person out there has an application that 
might be useful for others in our field to see, we want to hear about it.


Again contact us if you would like to contribute something. This is a long 
process and the book is still in development.

Thanks!

Editors
Ron Brown (ronbrown a.t. mailbox dot sc dot edu)
Beth Thomsett-Scott (beth.thomsett-scott a.t. unt dot edu)

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