On 22/08/06, "Jörn Zaefferer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Or even better, it would use a server-side script to create the > > documentation and a zip file that you then download that contains all > > the files needed to generate that documentation (if you want to tweak > > the XSL file). > > This fits into the idea of a serverside repository that John mentioned. You > just upload your plugin to the repository (via SVN?) and the server generates > docs and examples and a downloadble distribution. This would make it quite > simple for both plugin developers and plugin users. There could be even bug > reports and comments for every plugin, something a single user wouldn't want > to setup for a simple plugin. > > I like the idea of writing my jquery.pluginname.js file with inline docs just > like jQuery has them, commit it to a repository, and see docs and examples > and a downloadable distribution online. > > -- Jörn > --
If there is a place to upload plugins, then there should be a way to upload them without using SVN (if you have a restrictive proxy/firewall for example). _______________________________________________ jQuery mailing list [email protected] http://jquery.com/discuss/
