From: Tim M. <T.M...@cs...> - 2007-02-09 09:32:58
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Mark Utting wrote: > Good. This seems to work nicely, though I had a few glitches. > > 1. It seems that you have to create a new (and insecure! -- don't use > your sourceforge password) Wiki account -- it does not use your > Sourceforge login -- no problem. > Yes, it isn't linked to sourceforge at all... it's just installed in the htdocs of the sourceforge account. You don't need an account to edit the pages, but perhaps it may be useful if we all use accounts when we edit though, so we know who is making the changes? > 2. After creating a new account I had to log in and out a couple of > times before I could edit the page as me. > > 3. When I saved the page, it gave an error (something about the server > losing information), but allowed me to try again, and it worked the > second time. > Hmmm... that's not good. I didn't have either of these problems though, so hopefully this was just a problem with connections or something. > So the big question: what content will be useful for us all? > * A summary of the status of each tool/project? > * A summary of what we are each working on? > * A HowTo/FAQ section? > * A RoadMap for the future? > Yes, all this should go on there. I think it would be nice if we had user-guides for many of the sub-projects (e.g. parser, typechecker, rules, zlive), with example code. This way, users may be encouraged to add their own solutions/code. An installation guide should also be on there, as well as links to downloading etc. Really, anything that users can contribute to. Tim |