Gerald Wiese <wi...@gnuhealth.org> writes: Cool, this is a great news!
> Hey, > > we are working on the documentation and aim to have it renewed before the > conference end of September. One student > from Hannover already transformed the Wikibooks state into Sphinx Read The > Docs Theme and we can take this as base. > > I just pushed it but it’s not yet present on any web server. To see it you > have to download it using Mercurial and open it > locally. On Debian based systems install mercurial like this from terminal: > > sudo apt install mercurial > > For openSUSE replace apt by zypper. Afterwards clone the repository: > > hg clone https://hg.savannah.gnu.org/hgweb/health-doc/ > > Then locate health-doc/gnuhealth-hmis/build/html/index.html and double click > it / open it with your browser. > > We are asking all of you to gather feedback and ideas how to improve the > documentation. > > Our first block of questions targets a higher level and we ask for responses > until end of July. > > Second block of questions can be answered afterwards continuously but still > the sooner the better: > > Are there chapters missing? > > Do we have chapters that are not needed? > > Should we change the structure regarding chapters and subchapters? > > Other suggestions for changes on a higher level? > > Do we have content missing? > > Is every module documented in a way that it’s really complete and > understandable? > > Does it actually work to follow old instructions? > > We should update all versions, screenshots, package names, typos, etc. > > If functionalities are not really working, we should make it transparent > (e.g. FHIR REST, Thalamus) > > Do we have links in place for differing installation strategies and other > documentations like Thalamus, MyGNUHealth, > Ansible, openSUSE? > > Beginning of August we will probably start a pad to assign tasks / chapters > to responsible people. > > Best > > Gerald --