Jed - while admirable, I think it is the wrong approach to statically document anything for TW, and one we've used just so many times for other TW documentation projects - with failure after failure. The most successful example using this documentation approach is
tiddlywiki.com - but even this
exceptional case suffers problems that stem from a static approach; The docs on
tiddlywiki.com ARE very good (of course) but it is problematic to revise the material and keep it up to date due to the process that all content there has to go through (which effectively burdens one single individual), and the documentation must keep a rigid structure that is good is some cases but unfortunate in other (...for example, a user wondering how to use "
tags" who types this into the search field on tiddlywiki.com... will not be happy.)
The superior way for a project like this is what you've already laid the foundation for, namely TWederation. (Ah, of course ;-)
IMO the following is what is required for a successful TW documentation project:
- get TWederation working
- set up a documentation TW that fetches peoples documentation
- ...which for a particular "doc-topic" filters the relevant tiddlers to make an aggregated topic-display
- include "quality systems" such as some voting mechanism or versioning to have tiddlers qualify for that topic-display
The key is to not rely too much on any one individual. The high activity on the boards is a definite indication that there is no end to questions so documentation has to be flexible and allow for accumulation rather than the typical static documents we've had so far.
Just my thoughts.
<:-)