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Wordle 619 4/6
🟨🟨🟨⬛⬛
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⬛🟩🟩⬛🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
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#Worldle #402 2/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩⬜⬅️
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Nope; we're using Squirrel.Windows[^].
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Message Removed
modified 27-Feb-23 15:02pm.
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Message Removed
modified 27-Feb-23 15:02pm.
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In the old days, I used to use Sandcastle to create dev facing browsable documentation (e.g. for an SDK). What would you recommend today?
Thanks,
/ravi
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Depends on your environment I suppose. In the JavaScript/TypeScript world, jsdoc is the defacto standard. Even VS Code has built-in intellisense support for it too.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: Depends on your environment Strictly C#.
/ravi
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You could always write one in this.
Ducks and runs.
Jeremy Falcon
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You just had to bring that guy back up...
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Jeremy Falcon
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Cue Vincent Price's soliloquy in Michael Jackson's Thriller:
"Darkness falls across the land,
the midnight hour is close at hand.
Creatures crawl in search of blood
to terrorize y'all's neighborhood."
Software Zen: delete this;
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oooooh!
that is a thing of beauty
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Thanks, Rick. I also think I'm going to continue to stick with SHFB as it's actively supported.
/ravi
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Last year I posted an SHFB issue and Eric Woodruff (not family of "our" Woodruff) responded quickly.
By then I had solved the issue by arranging the project in another way, but found his response very positive.
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Yes, EW is a good guy.
/ravi
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Sandcastle? Is that the system I remember from the days I was maintaining a toolbox installation wizard: The users wanted Sandbox included in a toolbox. It took ages to install the 115,000 files. It turned out that those asking for it only needed the core functionality, so the installation was reduced to no more than 60,000 files.
I may be mixing it up with another tool in the same toolbox, but I believe it was Sandbox going completely bananas in number of files installed.
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In light of your post above...
So he doesn't have to write the non-existent references that ChatGPT will create?
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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I would say Swagger/Swashbuckle for OpenAPI-style REST API's. You can add quite some additional info on top of an already developer-oriented API description, and it can be used to generate clients that will 'just work' based on the spec.
For an SDK in the form of a nuget file, since you said you were doing C#, package a markdown readme file in the nuget, this way the documentation comes with the library. I prefer having version-bound and 'incorporated' documentation rather than having to go look for it on some site, that 9 out of 10 times is not updated to match your version.
And eventually, depending on your requirements, a generated and organic documentation site using something like docfx might be useful to give some additional info, which again, can/should be linked to from within the nuget or Swagger.
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Ill just recap what another said, and might not be useful as sounds like a program API, instead of web API.
but yeah, OpenAPI Specification, formally Swagger, with Swashbuckle being the C# .net implementation, is a JSON formatted specification. Which has been levelled up to standard that other web api ingesting services have incorporated so no some automated level of point and click, and your program knows how all the details needed to use that web api service.
Mention only, that maybe specification been branched out to cover other types of API
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