On Aug 6, 2013, at 11:03 AM, Dan Scott <[email protected]> wrote: > > Crazy idea to avoid bottlenecking, depending on how many files we're > talking about: > > 1. Push the draft docs into a git working "collab" branch > > 2. Put up a wiki page linking to each file (git version and HTML > version), and let people edit the wiki to show that they're working on / > have finished proofreading each file. > > 3a. If the proofreader also has the skills to push changes to git, > then they can push their changes to the collab branch > > 3b. Otherwise, they could add comments to the wiki page to indicate > where changes need to happen, and then someone who may not be yboston > would be able to make those changes > > Seem doable? > _______________________________________________ > OPEN-ILS-DOCUMENTATION mailing list > [email protected] > http://list.georgialibraries.org/mailman/listinfo/open-ils-documentation
For the record, I have about 28 individual Asciidoc files with 28 matching HTML files (plus images). I don't know if this approach will be worth it if I only have one or two people helping me, compared to the time it will take me to set it up. Also, I will probably be the only one that is using Git in this group. I am still a Git newbie, and it is great to see ways that source control can be leveraged, while taking advantage of current community practices, to make our lives easier. I will keep this approach in mind for future use. Does that make sense? Thanks, Yamil _______________________________________________ OPEN-ILS-DOCUMENTATION mailing list [email protected] http://list.georgialibraries.org/mailman/listinfo/open-ils-documentation
