1. The OpenJFX Wiki on openjdk.java.net is ideal for maintaining pages related to the Project itself. This can be supplemented by other Wikis. As for access, any OpenJFX Project Author (or Committer) can have write access to the Wiki. Just let me know if you want access, but it isn't activated yet.

2. This is where the community could really help as noted by Johan and others. The tutorials are indeed out of date. If you want to file a JBS bug and assign it to me, I can see what needs to be done to either correct (if simple) or archive pages that are so out of date as to be useless (or worse, misleading).

-- Kevin



On 9/4/2018 1:18 AM, Nir Lisker wrote:
1.  Yes. The OpenJFX wiki is editable only by specific people (or only
Kevin) and it requires a lot of updating. We need either to be able to
submit changes to it, or to use the GitHub wiki which is collaborative by
design, in which case we need to hide the OpenJFX wiki to avoid confusion.

2. Yes. The tutorials [1] are slightly outdated (and SceneBuilder should
disappear from there ASAP and point to Gluon). I don't know who controls
those pages.

3. No. There's not enough traction. Jonathan Giles collects some "links of
the week" and the semi-zombified /r/JavaFX subreddit is enough to indicate
that we shouldn't invest yet in this direction.

[1] https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/javase-clienttechnologies.htm

- Nir

On Tue, Sep 4, 2018 at 10:02 AM Johan Vos <johan....@gluonhq.com> wrote:

It has been mentioned a number of times that JavaFX would benefit from a
JavaFX website.
I see a number of options that fall in the category website:

1. A set of pages with details on what OpenJFX is, how to build, where to
download and get release notes, how to contribute, roadmap,... That is what
I believe can perfectly be done in the OpenJFX wiki. It can be the
reference manual

2. A set of pages targeting new and existing JavaFX developers, with a
focus on where to download, how to get started (maven/gradle/IDE's), where
to get docs/tutorials and probably with some links to third party libraries
(free/commercial). This is sort of the user manual.

3. A highly interactive community site, gathering tweets/blog posts etc,
more or less similar to what James Weaver and Gerrit Grunwald did years
ago.

For 1: I think this is up to us (OpenJFX committers) to maintain and
improve. It will also benefit the people here.

For 2: This is the most important thing, I believe. It would be great if a
number of people from this list step up to organize this. It can be a
static website, a github page, or anything else. I don't think this
strictly belongs under OpenJFX (which I consider to be the technical
development umbrella) but it's extremely important to have.
I think this is a perfect opportunity for people and companies who want to
get more active in JavaFX to get involved in.

For 3: That would be nice, but I think it's too ambitious for now. I would
be happy with a static, simple, clear website.

- Johan


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