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Write G'MIC language gmic-py Python cookbook for G'MIC beginners #91
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Ping! Noted. |
The cookbook generates well through the github -> readthedocs hook, for the cookbook-related Pull request's branch named just To grab the project and point to the proper branch to edit files:
Note that if you feel lazy anyday (allowed by humanity) and like writing documentation in the blind a bit without needing any terminal work, you can use the Github's pen buttons or "edit file" links to change files in the cookbook branch, from the web browser, then wait 5-10 minutes for your changes to appear on gmic-py.readthedocs.io (cookbook variant). To build the documentation offline (if ever it is not too complicated, otherwise I wish to simplify it for any future contributors):
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@grosgood Feel free to start by using the "Edit file" tool first, if you dislike using the terminal build environment to start with. |
tutorials.rst has been moved to /DISABLED_DOC/ so the docs build time gets ultra fast (ugly but easy technique..). Added a TODO item above to reinstate it at the end of our work. |
Ping! Just started writing. First post looks like maybe 12:00 EDT 16:00 UTC 4/11 thereabouts. Saw your rwcimg remark - hanging it on a to-do peg. May be pertinent for this cookbook, as a '.cimg' file is a serialized gmic image list - conceptual workalike to Python pickle. |
Hello, yes this gmic image list to cimg tutorial idea seems very relevant... Basically anything that is well packaged and adds online literature on gmic-py usage may be useful to the community... No order of delivery is important now, as most important is motivation and ability to finish someday what has been generously started. |
Observation: Python developers have difficulty digging into the G'MIC language. Now that gmic-py is there, an easy "glue layer" may help those users want to dig deeper into G'MIC, with appreciated help from cookbook documentation.
Related to this pixls.us discussion with @grosgood as which gmic.eu's documentation chapters are the most important for G'MIC beginners, and would make a good python-translated cookbook for Pythonists.
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