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- -*- outline -*-
- Some documentation tips culled from emacs-devel postings.
- ** Manual indices
- http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2008-10/msg00400.html
- For example, this text:
- @vindex x-gtk-show-hidden-files
- @vindex x-gtk-file-dialog-help-text
- When Emacs is compiled with GTK+ support, it uses the GTK+ ``file
- chooser'' dialog. Emacs adds an additional toggle button to this
- dialog, which you can use to enable or disable the display of hidden
- files (files starting with a dot) in that dialog. If you want this
- toggle to be activated by default, change the variable
- @code{x-gtk-show-hidden-files} to @code{t}. In addition, Emacs adds
- help text to the GTK+ file chooser dialog; to disable this help text,
- change the variable @code{x-gtk-file-dialog-help-text} to @code{nil}.
- has index entries for the variables it describes, which is good, but
- what if a user looks for this information without knowing the names of
- these variables? For those, I added these two concept index entries:
- @cindex hidden files, in GTK+ file chooser
- @cindex help text, in GTK+ file chooser
- Thus, if a user types "i hidden files TAB" in Info, she will see the
- first entry, and so if she types "i file chooser RET". See why it is
- better?
- The way to come up with useful index entries is to put yourself in the
- shoes of someone who looks for the information, and think about words
- and phrases you'd use to find it.
- One other rule for good indexing is not to have several index entries
- that begin with the same substring and point to the same page or
- screenful (i.e. to places that are close to one another). Here's a
- fictitious example of such redundant entries:
- @cindex foobar, how to use
- @cindex foobar rules
- Either leave only one of these, e.g. just "@cindex foobar", or
- combine them into a single entry, e.g.:
- @cindex foobar, rules and usage
- ** Point is a proper name
- http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2008-10/msg00414.html
- In Emacs tradition, we treat "point" as a proper name when it refers
- to the current editing location. It should not have an article.
- Thus, it is incorrect to write, "The point does not move". It should
- be, "Point does not move".
- If you see "the point" anywhere in Emacs documentation or comments,
- referring to point, please fix it.
- ** Don't use passive verbs
- http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2008-10/msg00414.html
- Documentation is clearer if it avoids the passive voice whenever
- possible. For example, rather than saying "Point does not move", say
- "This does not move point". If you come across passive verbs in Emacs
- documentation or comments, please see if it is possible to make the
- text shorter and clearer using the active voice. Usually that does
- make an improvement. The explicit subject required by the active voice
- often provides important information which makes the text clearer, too.
- ** Antinews nodes
- *** Why Antinews is useful
- http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2008-11/msg00893.html
- The usefulness of Antinews is to help people who buy the printed
- manual and are still using the previous Emacs version. That's why we
- focus on the (eliminated) behavior of the old version rather than on
- the new features.
- Of course, we try to make it amusing as well.
- *** Don't mention in Antinews too many features absent in old versions
- http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2008-11/msg01054.html
- Since the purpose of Antinews is to help people use the previous Emacs
- version, there is usually no need to mention features that are simply
- absent in that version. That situation will be clear enough to users
- without help from the manual.
- For instance, this
- @item
- Emacs can no longer be started as a daemon. We decided that having an
- Emacs sitting silently in the background with no visual manifestation
- anywhere in sight is too confusing.
- may not need mentioning, because --daemon will give an error message
- saying it's not implemented, and other cases aren't affected.
- The kind of change for which the user really needs help from Antinews
- is where a feature works _differently_ in the previous version.
- In those cases, the user might have trouble figuring out how to use
- the old version without some sort of help.
- ** To indicate possession, write Emacs's rather than Emacs'.
- http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2012-02/msg00649.html
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