On Sat, Feb 27, 2010 at 03:30:49PM -0800, Don Armstrong wrote: > The crux of your argument is that for many GUI programs, manpages > aren't as essential as other forms of documentation, and developer > time would be better spent doing making other improvements.
I acknowledge this part of the problem and your reasoning. I wonder however if there isn't another part of the issue which is: how to point the user which ended up on the manual page [1] to the appropriate source of documentation. The infamous undocumented(7) was far too generic to be useful, but maybe in the specific contexts mentioned by Joss there can be appropriate place where to point the user. If this is true, would it make sense to have a, for instance, "undocumented-gnome" manpage which points to the appropriate entry in the GNOME help system? The same goes for KDE and for any other UI sub-system we have. If there is some uniformity there, we can avoid relaxing policy suggestion (which from this thread I'd say it is not something we want to do anyhow), but still relieving part of the pain in maintaining useless manpages. Also, if there are large enough subsystems, one might imagine automatic processing of the specific undocumented manpages to fire up the appropriate help system automatically, e.g. if I'm under X11. Just my 0.02€, Cheers. [1] e.g. because she didn't know the program was a GUI program: maybe she heard the name on the internet, maybe she found the binary while skimming through /usr/bin/ -- Stefano Zacchiroli -o- PhD in Computer Science \ PostDoc @ Univ. Paris 7 z...@{upsilon.cc,pps.jussieu.fr,debian.org} -<>- http://upsilon.cc/zack/ Dietro un grande uomo c'è ..| . |. Et ne m'en veux pas si je te tutoie sempre uno zaino ...........| ..: |.... Je dis tu à tous ceux que j'aime
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