Re: Documentation structure

Subject: Re: Documentation structure
From: "Mike O." <obie1121 -at- yahoo -dot- com>
To: "TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com>
Date: Sun, 6 Feb 2005 08:03:25 -0800 (PST)


Based on your post, it sounds like your management has some halfway
decent ideas about what kind of docs they need, but they are
micro-managing you a bit. Their requests sound a bit
off-the-top-of-their-heads. If you can, ask them to step back a bit and
help them identify the information needs they are trying to solve with
each of these docs.

Getting Started Guide - well, nothing wrong with that. It's a
nice-to-have. If you already have a good user guide and admin guide in
place, a Getting Started guide can be created pretty easily. As far as
level of detail, let it be more or less a subset of the user guide.
Don't include concepts or facts that aren't also in the user guide.
Don't make the mistake of trying to write the Getting Started guide
first.

Troubleshooting Guide - Another nice-to-have, maybe as an appendix in
an Admin Guide. First, make a list of troubles, then write the
solutions. If nobody has experienced the problem, should it really be
in a troubleshooting guide? Don't think up exotic troubles just to
write a troubleshooting guide. Keep it simple with basic things like
"Can't connect" or "Won't start." Also see the previous threads about
documenting-by-FAQ - usually these FAQs tend to be NBAQs (Never Been
Asked Questions).

Use Cases book - Unless your product is a modeling tool that creates
Use Cases, this is an odd request. I'd challenge them on this. It may
be that they want task-based documentation but are not knowledgeable
enough about tech writing to express this requirement - you can help
them refine this idea. I wouldn't imagine that a user manual written as
use cases would be very helpful.

ini file guide - Start by documenting the .ini file with inline
comments. Any additional thoughts on an .ini file probably belong in an
administration or installation guide. A standalone ".ini file guide"
sounds a little odd. Yes, you do need to document everything in the
.ini file even if they aren't allowed to edit it. Otherwise they will
edit it to find out what happens (well, that's what *I* would do!).
Also, what is an "ini file command?" And, why does a database product
have an ini file? Usually this info moves to the database in Version
1.1 - ask your dev team.

Mike O.



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