Hi Stephan, Alexey

That's exactly what readme.io contains - installation instructions,
configuration, and examples for key-value, sql, etc. for thin clients. For
example, see these documentation pages for Node.js (currently hidden in the
latest version of the doc) :

https://apacheignite.readme.io/v2.6/docs/nodejs-thin-client
https://apacheignite.readme.io/v2.6/docs/nodejs-thin-client-initialization-and-configuration
https://apacheignite.readme.io/v2.6/docs/nodejs-thin-client-key-value
https://apacheignite.readme.io/v2.6/docs/nodejs-thin-client-sql
https://apacheignite.readme.io/v2.6/docs/nodejs-thin-client-binary-types
https://apacheignite.readme.io/v2.6/docs/nodejs-thin-client-security

This how Python and PHP thin clients will also be documented on readme.io

-Prachi




On Tue, Sep 18, 2018 at 3:26 AM, Stepan Pilshchikov <
pilshchikov....@gmail.com> wrote:

> > You know, I'm confused with all this documentation stuff...
> > For nodejs client all docs were moved from the repo to readme.io but
> the
> > readme.md keeps the installation instructions (duplicated with
> > readme.io). Probably, that's ok.
> > Will add similar short readme.md to the PHP PR.
>
> Its good
>
> What i think (and how it partially now):
> All user documentation should be on readme.io (how to install, use it,
> configurate, description for examples)
> All developers documentation (how to release, how to start develop) and(!)
> basic description should be in repository
>
>
>
>
> --
> Sent from: http://apache-ignite-developers.2346864.n4.nabble.com/
>

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