Nix Documentation | 418 Members | |
| Discussion about documentation improvements around the Nix ecosystem | 86 Servers |
| Sender | Message | Time |
|---|---|---|
| 8 Mar 2024 | ||
| So maybe we should start with those efforts. I also have a plan how to avoid breaking existing links. | 11:05:42 | |
| A really stupid way to avoid breaking links without javascript would be to replace the contents of each section with a link to the new link :P | 11:06:37 | |
| Requires one click by users | 11:06:56 | |
In reply to @infinisil:matrix.orgyes, have a look out how option docs and release notes are rendered in the nixos manual. the facilities to split things have been there from day 1, and we've said this at least five times now | 11:16:00 | |
| As said, my biggest worry with splitting into multiple pages is that almost all current links won't work anymore. But IMO splitting into multiple pages will be a worse experience without at least a way to easily search those multiple pages | 11:31:51 | |
| I think the panic about regressions is somewhat overrated - it's not like we'd just drop some other tool without any sort of testing and without having both documentation methods side-by-side for at least some time to gather feedback | 11:33:13 | |
| that is true, but redirections and search are so much easier to do as a retrofit than byt switching out your entire toolchain? | 11:33:18 | |
In reply to @danielsidhion:nixos.devagain, the problem is not the act of change but the sheer opportunity cost | 11:35:00 | |
| a search index generator that emits a json file some existing search tool can read could be built in under an hour | 11:36:24 | |
| I appreciate any insights you have that would make search and redirection much easier, because the way I see, it would take quite some effort to write yet more custom code to make those work | 11:36:39 | |
| it would not, because nrd already has the option to load javascript files and the nixos manual has demonstrated that such a global script can be used to redirect old links | 11:37:41 | |
| * it would not, because nrd already has the option to load javascript files and the | 11:37:59 | |
| and, to be perfectly clear, we have no objection to doing something cursed like rejiggering the nrd html exporter to build something mdbook could read for structure. but the exporter as exists now must also stay because pulling mdbook into the nixos manual build has since time immemorial been a Not Happening situation | 11:39:34 | |
| From my perspective, the overhead of maintaining custom tooling for everything is on the long run higher than the effort to migrate to a more well-known framework + custom plugins to solve specific needs. We have 0 nrd documentation and resources to let people get started, learn and extend it, and we require people who are familiar with a lot of concepts for them to start making any changes there. With a more well-known framework, we'd have lots more resources that many people without deeper technical knowledge would be able to help | 11:41:08 | |
| as we said. consider the opportunity cost of a team already strapped for resources. | 11:43:37 | |
| but it seems that this is a foregone conclusion, so. | 11:43:58 | |
| That's exactly what I'm considering when I look at the long term of both scenarios | 11:44:11 | |
| In any case, we don't even know yet how much work it would be to make any more well-known framework fit our needs - that's what I'm researching. If we find something that makes things easier in the long run, I'm definitely interested in putting the effort to migrate, but that's an if that we won't know until I finish looking at them | 11:45:21 | |
| I'm positive that it won't be hard to extend some well-known framework to our needs, but that could not be the case. I thought mdBook would be a good one and have been disappointed so far 🥲 there are a few other promising ones though | 11:46:40 | |
| in that case, may there be great success for your research. | 11:47:42 | |
| 11:47:53 | ||
| Yes, to make it explicit: for the long term we have to weigh the cost of onboarding contributors to the infrastructure against the cost of adapting it to our evolving needs at given time. And costs on the contributors’ end are very hard to estimate, so usually all we’re left with is what we know about people who are currently there. That’s another issue with contributor churn: it’s very hard to even assess the trade-offs between evolving existing code and writing new code, because existing code can seem harder to grok than using a ready-made interface, and just as well can get trivial to grok with guidance. | 11:56:50 | |
| * Yes, to make it explicit: for the long term we have to weigh the cost of onboarding contributors to the infrastructure against the cost of adapting it to our evolving needs at any given time. And costs on the contributors’ end are very hard to estimate, so usually all we’re left with is what we know about people who are currently there. That’s another issue with contributor churn: it’s very hard to even assess the trade-offs between evolving existing code and writing new code, because existing code can seem harder to grok than using a ready-made interface, and just as well can get trivial to grok with guidance. | 11:57:13 | |
| I just want to make a note that the new tech stack for the website has already created a staggering amount of regressions, I hope that the panic of regressions on the documentation stack will be unfounded. | 16:34:05 | |
| 9 Mar 2024 | ||
In reply to @raitobezarius:matrix.orgYou mean the nixos.org homepage's move to astro+tailwind? What regressions have you noticed? | 06:59:59 | |
| 10 Mar 2024 | ||
| 04:09:32 | ||
| How can one integrate more of the manuals and documentation directly with Nix? Like if Nix could handle a greater share of the workload, maintaining the website might become simpler. Meaning if it can package anything can it package a website manual in a way? | 04:19:30 | |