As we have beat around the "You clearly have no idea what a wiki is" bush, I think we failed to answer your question...
If your chosen scripting language has a wiki, and that wiki has your answers, then Yes, you should use it. It's not 1998 anymore; The fears over unmoderated edits to wikis have largely proven to be overstated, and aren't even true on Wikipedia anymore, where the claim was most prevelent. The simple fact of the matter is that wikis have enough eyes on them that, even if false information gets inserted, it won't last long. And on a wiki owned and operated by a specific project, the risk is essentially non-existent. Use the wiki. Your life will be more stress free. On Tue, Sep 11, 2018, 14:05 Richard Owlett <[email protected]> wrote: > To those who revere the BARD, I sort of apologize. > Did he not know how to turn a phrase? > P.S. I was taught the fundamentals of "headline writing" in Jr. High > more than 50 years ago. Did I get your attention? > > My underlying problem is OS independent. However, I seek a Linux > solution. For my preferred scripting language, in depth tutorials are > few. An acceptable solution would be a repository of commented working > scripts. My language of choice does have a wiki. HOWEVER, anyone can > modify anything at any time without immediate checks/balances. > > Where should I go looking? > TIA > > [also, am I too far OT?] > > > _______________________________________________ > PLUG mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug > _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
