Hi Ben,

Ironically, that's exactly the system we do have. On tiddlywiki.com you'll 
see that editing any tiddler displays a banner that says "Can you help us 
improve this documentation? Find out how 
<http://tiddlywiki.com/#Improving%20TiddlyWiki%20Documentation> to edit this 
tiddler on GitHub 
<https://github.com/Jermolene/TiddlyWiki5/edit/master/editions/tw5.com/tiddlers/>"
  
- the fact remains that writing documentation is difficult and boring, 
however necessary, and we need to find a funner way to do it.

I agree with Mat(thais) that a wiki is the way to go and I agree with 
Mat(abele) that we should seed it with the best posts from here.

The great taboo question is - does the wiki need to be a tiddlywiki? Of 
course, it's super-cute that we can use tiddlywiki.com as it's own docs but 
if we want a secure multi-user wiki, we're much better off using something 
like mediawiki, surely?

Regards,
Richard



On Sunday, August 30, 2015 at 8:14:31 AM UTC+10, Ben H. wrote:
>
> As far as documentation goes, just create a Github repository containing a 
> tiddlywiki that runs on node. That way anyone can edit the .tid files 
> (either through the wiki itself or with a text editor), and simply submit a 
> pull request with their changes. Periodically compile and upload that doc 
> to the web. 
>
> I'll respond to the rest shortly. 
>

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