On the topic of keeping the user informed of where they are, I am
always surprised when I click on the documentation tab. Suddenly, all
the items change. And of all the top level tabs, the documentation tab
is the only one that makes such a change.
Once in the documentation section, the tabs on the left work differently.
Some just jump between a single long document while others bring up their own
pages. Maybe if more topics were in their own page it would be easier to
consolidate the information about the topic.
I hope we can bring a bit more consistency to each page and to the way the
tabs work.
Thanks,
--
Steve Herber herber@thing.com work: 206-261-0307
Systems Engineer, AMCIS, UoW home: 425-454-2399
On Thu, 6 Jun 2002, Ron Shannon wrote:
> IMHO, our big picture challenge is that multiple explanations for
> several topics are spread out over several different docs and pages One
> parameter is frequently discussed in four or more places (QSG, files
> reference pages, file comments, main documentation, etc.) That gives
> multiple perspectives, which can be good, but can also lead to at least
> the appearance, especially to a beginner, of conflicting information as
> well as increasing maintenance work. As Tom has noted, this condition is
> just a natural result of the way the docs have grown over time.
> Presumably, part of the role of the Doc Support Group (DSG) is to hash
> out "better" organization, whatever that may be. Because the QSG
is an
> overview, it would be best if the future structure of the whole set of
> docs isn''t _too_ hazy when the QSG is redone.
>
> Some possible design goals in this regard:
> (1) Keep the drill down layers on most topics or parameters
> limited, if possible, to say, three. Something like (a) overview/intro,
> (b) main doc, (c) detailed example, with the latter usually in
> file-specific docs/pages perhaps. Extended presentation of special case
> scenarios (PPTP, IPSec, etc.) could be part of the main doc layer,
> though perhaps in a special section or appendices.
> (2) Keep the relationship of the layers and the user''s position
> clearly visible to the user, so the user can more easily navigate up and
> down through their chosen level of detail.
> (3) Detail accessibility, in the form of good TOC, indexes &
> search is important. Although indexing can be chore, "layer
control"
> would help.
>
> Ron