Is it possible to include blog links or samples as: "External References:" ?
I think that someone that wants to help with the documentation can have a very good starting point with the external references on hand, and it is very clear that is not the "Official documentation" On Mon, Feb 29, 2016 at 10:43 AM, Konstantin Boudnik <c...@apache.org> wrote: > On Mon, Feb 29, 2016 at 06:40PM, Cédric Champeau wrote: > > 2016-02-29 18:37 GMT+01:00 Konstantin Boudnik <c...@apache.org>: > > > > > Sorry for a delay in the answer... > > > > > > On Mon, Feb 29, 2016 at 12:01PM, Jochen Theodorou wrote: > > > > > > > > On 27.02.2016 05:26, Aseem Bansal wrote: > > > > >Hi Konstantin Boudnik > > > > > > > > > >Are the things on groovy-lang not considered originating from Apache > > > > >premises? > > > > > > Where the code for groovy-lang is hosted? That will answer your > question. > > > > > > > The website itself is in its own Git repo. However, the docs that it > > contains are hosted into the main Apache Groovy Git repo. > > Then it seems to be originating from the Apache, as far as I can tell. > > > > > If we link to Mr Hakis blog, and that is seen as Docs, then we have > > > > external Docs, which do not originate from the ASF. In my opinion no > > > > problem, since these are blog posts and not docs. Especially not > > > > since his blog is about more than Groovy alone > > > > > > That could be fine if the link is explicitly external and not included > into > > > the release _materially_, ie the content isn't copied into the release > zip, > > > etc. Because then will have to figure out about the status of this > > > contribution, licensing, and all that jazz. > > > > > > Cos > > > >