I think the convention we have been using is that headers included directly
in the "api.h" headers were considered public, those that aren't were
considered a gray area.

On Thu, Sep 29, 2022 at 11:51 AM Aldrin <akmon...@ucsc.edu.invalid> wrote:

> > many parts were written without the intention that those APIs would not
> be used directly
>
> From the proceeding sentence, I assume you mean that many parts were not
> intended for direct use?
>
>
> I think my personal take is that I consider all parts of the C++ libraries
> to be public. Otherwise, I have
> trouble imagining how a C/C++ project benefits from Arrow or how to use it
> before "the perfect API"
> is available.
>
> In general, I agree that higher-level APIs should be used where possible,
> but when that can't be done it
> seems clear that one would have to use the lower-level APIs, especially
> while Arrow is still growing. In
> addition, if I want to contribute to Arrow, I would also need to interact
> with the lower-level API at some
> point and I wouldn't necessarily want to start with trying to contribute
> code before using it in my own
> project(s).
>
>
> Aldrin Montana
> Computer Science PhD Student
> UC Santa Cruz
>
>
> On Thu, Sep 29, 2022 at 11:21 AM Will Jones <will.jones...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> > In a discussion about new additions to C++ docs, someone had a question:
> > Should we even be documenting this?
> >
> > Long-time contributors to Arrow C++ noted that many parts were written
> > without the intention that those APIs would not be used directly.
> Instead,
> > they were intended as an implementation detail of the high-level bindings
> > (such as Python, R, Ruby, and so on). This made sense early in the
> project,
> > as I understand it, because the high level bindings had the most
> potential
> > users and more libraries to collaborate with (for example, PyArrow +
> > Pandas).
> >
> > However, we now have several projects that use the C++ libraries, so this
> > older outlook on C++ as mostly being an internal library no longer makes
> > sense.
> >
> > Which parts of the C++ libraries are considered public? And are we
> > effectively delineating that for our users?
> >
>

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