I just put up a "Extending wxruby for dummies" which describes how to
wrap your favorite wxWidgets class with a .t file. This does not cover
wxruby-swig, as that is still a work in progress.
Nick
> Zach Dennis wrote:
> >
> > Thanks Curt for the info on the how-to. Would do you recommend as far
as
> > living documents? Should I put up something small, simple and
> > concise. Then
> > as I get time edit the wiki page with more information, or should I
wait
> > until I have a full page of content done before adding it to the wiki?
> > Should I apply incremental release XP style programming to the
> > wiki writing,
> > or more a monolithic functional approach?
>
>
> It really depends on your preferred work style and the amount of territory
> you plan to cover.
>
> There''s certainly nothing wrong starting with small/concise and
filling out> more details over time. But if you put up pages that are incomplete and/or
> not self contained, then I would at least stick a warning at the top
of the> page telling readers that the page is under construction and not yet
> complete.
>
> Curt
>
> > Zach Dennis wrote:
> > >
> > > I would like to add information/tutorial to wxGrid and the
> > like. How can I
> > > add a tutorials to the wiki?
> >
> > Great! We really need more documentation like this.
> >
> > I assume, you know how to use and edit wiki pages, so I won''t
cover that
> > (unless you tell me I''m wrong). but first (if you
haven''t done so),
click> > wiki''s "Preferences" link and create a username
(like
> > "ZachDennis") so that
> > your contributions will be credited to you instead of an anonymous
> > ip-address.
> >
> > Start by editing the main tutorial page
> > (http://wxruby.rubyforge.org/wiki/wiki.pl?WxRuby_Tutorial) and add a
new
> > entry to the table of contents. Then I would suggest using one of the
> > existing tutorials as a "template", and just modify the text
to
> > become your
> > tutorial. The easiest way to pick up the wiki text for an existing
page is> > to edit it and then copy its wiki text to the clipboard.
> >
> > Also, for extensive editing like this, I usually prefer to edit a
> > text file
> > (on my local machine) using my favorite text editor, and then
pasting that> > into the wiki edit-box.
> >
> > Curt
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > wxruby-users mailing list
> > wxruby-users@rubyforge.org
> > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/wxruby-users
> >
>
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>
>
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