I just had an introduction to Neo4j's documentation system. I WAS IMPRESSED!!!

I have asked Peter Neubauer to provide a overview of what they have
done. Developers are now keen on writing docs, since it turns out nice
with fairly little effort.


You can read about it;
http://docs.neo4j.org/chunked/snapshot/community-docs.html

Note, no in-house server is needed. Works in offline mode (your
filesystem), online with mash-up comments, and generates manual-style
PDF. Everything fully versioned, with a version switcher(! see upper
right corner) in the HTML...


Peter, give us the nice juicy bits.

On Mon, Aug 22, 2011 at 11:56 PM, Paul Merlin <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Gang,
>
> +1 for the Wicket quickstart
> +1 for Zend documentation versionning
> +1 for Camel showing how to apply known patterns the Camel way
>
> I like the principle of CheatSheets or RefCards.
> IMO something like a Qi4j RefCard would be good and reassuring for new
> comers.
> As an example, this one about Rails3 is really usefull
> http://blog.envylabs.com/2010/12/rails-3-cheat-sheets/
> I'm thinking about COOP constructs, Qi4j assembly and runtime for example.
>
> My 2 cents, maybe more later.
>
> /Paul
>
>
> --
> Paul Merlin - eskatos.github.com
>
> _______________________________________________
> qi4j-dev mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.ops4j.org/mailman/listinfo/qi4j-dev
>



-- 
Niclas Hedhman, Software Developer
http://www.qi4j.org - New Energy for Java

I live here; http://tinyurl.com/3xugrbk
I work here; http://tinyurl.com/24svnvk
I relax here; http://tinyurl.com/2cgsug

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