Thanks for replying.

I bought the book and I agree, it's great. But what I'm asking is some help
from the community to start an official "wiki", because the one that exists
is not openly editable, or at least, make it openly editable

What would be great for the web2py project (and its users) is if some site
existed where one could go and get access to things like:
- Announcements/News
- change log ( what was introduced in which version and respective
implications, if any )
- usage examples
- recipes (web2pyslices seems to fill this role quite well)
- plugin list
- Howto's
- FAQs
- up-to-date deployment guides
- Forum to discuss future features (?)
- etc..

I know many of these things are available either on the mailing list, the
book or web2py.com but they are hard to find ( mailing list search is
completely broken! )

Also, I believe it has to be community editable because it is just too much
work to be done by the authors of the code since they are busy working on
the next features and bug fixes (as they should be!).

What do you think? Is it a problem of getting hosts, domains or just
inertia/lack of interest?

See ya.
--
Tiago





On Mon, Feb 1, 2010 at 9:53 PM, Christopher Steel <[email protected]>wrote:

> Hi Tiago,
>
> Your right, things are a bit scattered around. That was one of my
> first observations as well. That said a wealth of documentation can be
> found, but it is "scattered". The following list of resources that
> gets updated fairly regularly (a big Thank You Denesl!) should get you
> started.
>
> Go to http://groups.google.com/group/web2py then choose  "web2py help
> & resources"
>
> The Web2py manual (second edition) is an excellent and well organized
> resource as well ($12.00 on Lulu) and well worth the 12 dollars...
>
> Welcome
>
> Chris
>
>
> On Feb 1, 7:45 am, tiago almeida <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Hello all,
> >
> > I really like web2py but allow me to say that the documentation in
> general
> > is a bit lacking.
> > For instance, the wiki looks to be unmantained for a long time. Also, I
> > don't see a way to create pages there.
> >
> > As someone pointed out a few days ago, having only the pdf as a
> > documentation source is not enough.
> >
> > My question is: *Why is the wiki @http://wiki.web2py.comdead? *I'd be
> > happy to contribute a few time writing documentation but I don't see how
> > (apart from starting another wiki which doesn't make much sense when
> there
> > is one already).
> >
> > To someone starting with web2py (like me), having the documentation
> > scattered all over the web is a bit hard (only today found out about
> > local_import, ironically with a mail from someone pointing to the same
> > problem; i have no idea what T3/t4 are (apart from seeing them
> somewhere),
> > etc).
> >
> > Is it possible to at least resuscitate the wiki so that it can be used as
> a
> > de facto wiki with examples and change history etc?
> >
> > Best regards,
> > Tiago Almeida
>
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