Hello,

Once again, my words have gotten the better of me. I apologize for the length 
of this message...

I have to admit that I do not understand what part of this research qualifies 
it for an IgNobel—was it the “well, duh!” aspect, or was it that these folks 
took seven years to determine this, or was it that they were able to convince 
some funding agency to support it the whole time?

Setting that aside for a moment, it *is* useful to acknowledge that most 
people’s help preference is “to click around and get help when I need it.” TBH, 
that’s my style—although once I’ve done that a while, I am quite likely to sit 
down and read in more depth. While I doubt anyone is eager to strip out 
features from GnuCash (Budgets, anyone?), I think we *can* consider that 
perhaps our assistance modes might need to be reconsidered.

I have been focused on moving detailed information OUT of Help and putting it 
INTO the Guide, based on my own preferences and experiences with GnuCash. 
Perhaps that is misguided, insofar as most users aren’t turning to this 
resource consistently.

Assuming that a well-written but overlooked Guide is the proverbial falling 
tree in the forest, how should we be leading the Roaming Clicker to our oasis 
of Help? I think it is clear from the list traffic that we have quite a bit of 
room for improvement: new users regularly ask for help on topics that have 
coverage in the Help, the Guide and/or the wiki. So, we need to be looking for 
Something Better.

Bearing in mind the amount of work already placed in the existing 
documentation, I believe that we can establish a clear Assistance Continuum 
that uses context help to direct users to specific sections of the Guide. I 
have mentioned  this in other discussions recently, but I want to reiterate it 
here. We should transition the Context Help to contain brief descriptions with 
a “For more on this topic, see” link to the Guide in every instance. I believe 
this would support the needs of Roaming Clickers reasonably well, using the 
resources we have already got.

One major impediment to this is the linking features in our sources. There is 
little that can be done about this, however, short of changing our platform 
altogether—which past experience shows is doomed to stir up a lot of discussion 
with no ultimate change (“Full of sound and fury” comes to mind). As I see it, 
one of the major challenges in creating links is that we currently have no 
naming practices for the documents. This causes burdens: which elements receive 
tags? how do we form the names to assign? and on the other side, what name do I 
need to put in to link to the other? If we can establish *what* should get 
labels, and *how* we label them, I believe it would smooth a great deal of this 
process out. (Even better would be a means to use variables for these, so that 
references could automagically be generated without a user keying in a long 
link label. How cool would that be?).

The wild card in this Assistance Continuum is the wiki. There is a lot of 
useful information there; how would a user know to find it? Placing an actual 
link to the wiki is doomed to fail, since the wiki is by nature dynamic. Is 
there some way to add a canned search of the wiki to context help? This canned 
search would allow the user to retrieve information on the wiki as it existed 
at the time of the search, rather than at the time of the help authorship.

I imagine here that the Context Help writer would enter a couple of terms into 
a slot in the Help entry that would then be tacked on to a wiki search (and, 
yes, I am already thinking that a structured storage such as SQL might be a 
better approach to manage this). I will note that such wiki search 
functionality would of necessity require improvement of the wiki search 
feature, and perhaps a restructuring of how the wiki is created. My attempt to 
search the wiki for the entry on adjusting column widths 
(https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/FAQ#Q:_How_do_I_resize_my_register_columns.3F_Why_can_I_not_shrink_the_description_column.3F)
 was less than successful. Any search I entered at the wiki search box returned 
a link to the general FAQ page, which doesn’t help. Similar attempts using 
Google were unsuccessful as well (why *are* the pdf copies of the documentation 
stored on wiki.gnucash.org as well at www.gnucash.org—or are they the same 
files?).

Cheers,
David

> On Sep 16, 2018, at 11:11 PM, John Ralls <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> So the IgNobel Prizes are out, and the “winner" of the literature prize is
> "Life Is Too Short to RTFM: How Users Relate to Documentation and "Excess 
> Features in Consumer Products”, 
> https://academic.oup.com/iwc/article/28/1/27/2363584 
> <https://academic.oup.com/iwc/article/28/1/27/2363584>.
> 
> Maybe instead of doing a rewrite we should just bin the lot and put the 
> effort into stripping GnuCash down to the bare essentials.
> 
> 
> ;-)
> 
> Regards,
> John Ralls
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> gnucash-devel mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel

_______________________________________________
gnucash-devel mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel

Reply via email to