Some of the cookbooks are handy.

What if somebody provided a way to do "wizard" style user interfaces.
(I requested information on a separate thread -- which is currently
awaiting moderation)

There is both a lack of official documentation and even resources of
those who've used it! I've done google searches and turned up nil in a
lot of cases! I'll try to contribute a bit when I figure out how to do
what i want. Blogs are the number one untapped resource for learning
new things.

--rob

On May 12, 11:11 am, Thadeus Burgess <thade...@thadeusb.com> wrote:
> We need tutorials, a beginners, intermediate, and expert level on
> web2py apps, each going into different details of web2py step by step
> line by line.
>
> --
> Thadeus
>
> On Wed, May 12, 2010 at 4:17 AM, cjrh <caleb.hatti...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > On May 12, 6:11 am, Richard <richar...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> The book was a huge improvement but there is certainly more to be
> >> done. Unfortunately this kind of work is not fun so happens slowly.
>
> > I am happy to volunteer help for documentation.  I enjoy improving
> > documentation.
>
> >> Would it be worth migrating useful content to the book (and slices)
> >> and close the legacy apps (AlterEgo, wiki)?
>
> > Yes, I think so.   Try to focus on the official documentation as much
> > as possible.  My 2nd edition copy of the book here looks about 325
> > pages, which is already quite long.  From a publisher point-of-view,
> > it may make more economic sense to split the official documentation
> > into two books, e.g. a "reference" manual and a "user" manual, the
> > former concerned with formal specifications of the classes and
> > structure of the framework, and the latter focused on how the
> > framework must be used to create applications?  It should be easy to
> > do this via Lulu.

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