1. Creating a bug report in Bugzilla
2. Formatting your example with documentation as an xdoc
3. Attaching the xdoc to your bug report with an explanation of what it is.
I will be happy to fill in the blanks for the parts you don't want to do. I would appreciate it if you formatted it like the current server side XML-RPC document and included explanations of the steps involved as my involvement in this project is mostly client side.
If nothing else, though, just ship me what you have and I will shop around on the dev list for someone to clean it up for the site.
--
Ryan Hoegg
ISIS Networks
http://www.isisnetworks.net
Martin Redington wrote:
Funnily enough, I've got almost exactly that ("hello world") sitting right here.
I'll tidy it up a bit, if someone else will write some intro text, with instructions for windows users if required (unix only here, I'm afraid).
On Monday, October 28, 2002, at 10:55 PM, sean wrote:
What would be nice is if you did away with the server example that's there now entirely and put up a "Hello, world" application (complete source, nothing fancy) with full instructions on getting the example working so anyone new who comes along can follow the instructions, get the server working, then contact the server with a browser (like Netscape) and see the results.
The snippets that are there now are tedious to assemble into a working server. The example isn't complete in terms of "here's you get you an XML-RPC server going" so I'm left with no way to figure out how to fill in the blanks except by poking around, guessing...testing. It's very stressful on this newcomer.
Once I see a "Hello, world" example application running, then I will know I have all the necessary components installed, and I can then extend the example to start handling the tasks I need the application to perform.
Sean O'Dell
