Hi Martin et al., IMHO, a receipe book would be very nice and would distribute the effort. Moreover, it would be a kind of "sumarized mailing list" for common problems, saving time for people searching the list. And if the receipes are on Trac, then anyone having a different solution for the same problem could fill the article by describing this alternate solution and benefits and drawbacks of each.
I just suggest someone to be the "maintainer" of such an online/printable book, to avoid duplicates, to keep things up to date, to ask the community to regroup some similar articles or update them, to arrange articles hierarchically, etc. Just my 2.5 cents (Euro is getting quite expensive comparing to USD these days!)... Sukender PVLE - Lightweight cross-platform game engine - http://pvle.sourceforge.net/ Le Mon, 09 Feb 2009 18:24:26 +0100, Martin Beckett <[email protected]> a écrit: > Could I suggest a wiki cookbook which could then be turned into a printed > book? > This seems to have worked for Python (the O'Reilly Python Cookbook is in it's > 3rd Ed) > > Paul's excellent intro book covers getting started and the source provides > the details but there is a need for 'the OSG way to do X' guide. > > I can certainly think of a dozen questions which are more community type > answers than strictly programming. eg. > Whats the best way to handle something like a grid which is part of the > scenegraph but not part of the model? > Do I store things like switch/PAT nodes in the file or create them from > scratch when I load it? > > Martin > > > _______________________________________________ > osg-users mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.openscenegraph.org/listinfo.cgi/osg-users-openscenegraph.org _______________________________________________ osg-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openscenegraph.org/listinfo.cgi/osg-users-openscenegraph.org

