Diplomacy/Templates problem

Subject: Diplomacy/Templates problem
From: "Jane Carnall" <jane -dot- carnall -at- digitalbridges -dot- com>
To: "TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com>
Date: Mon, 30 Jul 2001 11:03:21 +0100

As part of the documentation, we're shipping a number of templates/working
examples: real code, compilable, heavily commented (by yours truly) and
referenced in the manuals. This was initially my idea, but has since been
heartily adopted by my manager (I'm part of the development team, working as
a sole technical writer) who ended up writing the code for the examples. I'm
not yet a very good Java programmer, and while I can proofread Java code I
can't write it to the contractual standards required for these examples.

Problem... er.. well... Enthusiastically, my manager's written 7 examples.
Count 'em. Seven. One new concept per example. The idea was to start off
with a dead simple example for newbies, work up to a more complex example.
But even the end example (deliberately) isn't *that* complicated. (We're
expecting that a number of users will simply take the final example and use
it as a template for their code.) I think that we ought to meld several
examples together - introduce two or three new concepts per example - and
bring the number down to 3, making the final version a little bit more
complex. I think that people working through the examples (which I hope at
least some of our users *will*) are more likely to work through three
examples, whereas they may not even start if they see seven to get through,
and I don't think they're likely to be phased (it's *aimed* at Java
programmers) by the fact that they're expected to take in, in the same
example, that we're now translating text *and* we're ooble-boogling the
dingbat instead of just goobling the batding. (Sorry, my security program
intervened and substituted technobabble for an actual example.)

Am I right about the number of examples? (I think I am, but am willing to
listen to cogently-reasoned disagreement.) If so, what's a nicely diplomatic
way of saying to my boss "Wonderful, but wrong!" (The code looks good, from
my perspective: makes it easy to rewrite, ahem, heavily edit the comments.)

Jane Carnall
Technical Writer, Digital Bridges, Scotland





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