[Robert Abitbol] Perhaps in the spirit of keeping the established independent pages system at Wikit, we could try the following system: '''1.''' When a question will have been answered on any one of the "Ask and you shall be given" pages, the question will be pasted into a new page with its category written on the bottom the same way it has always been done here. Ex: a page called [Detecting the sort of files in an Oracle Console] Category: Database This way: the system at Wikit will be uniform. A page per item. See for example: [Proof of concept: Detecting the sort of files in an Oracle Console] '''2.''' A few index pages could be created giving a complete list with comments of all pages related to a subject. See for an example: [Proof of concept: Index Page: Databases] This is the in my view the simplest way to process the questions on the "Ask and you shall be given" pages and it's also the best way to keep the uniform system of '''one subject per page''' established here at Wikit. ---- '''Comments''' [MAK] First of all, for the love of Tcl, please stop creating a bazillion pages on the same topic and leaving poo all over the place. There are now at least seven pages just for arguing on the same thread alone, not to mention the arguing on other pages. I've followed some of your links to other wikis and you seem to do the same thing and make people grumpy in the same way at the others too. If you want to experiment, how about setting your own separate Wikit installation for "proof of concept" instead of leaving permanent junk all over this one? Secondly, the majority problems you are trying to solve are technological, not methodical. Things like index pages and links to edit/recent changes/etc. at the top of pages are ones issues for the Wikit software, not for page editing. Perhaps you don't realize that where you've seen some of these things you've seen in other Wikis (like heirarchical categorization/indexing and [UseModWiki]'s SubPage features) that you're trying to manually crowbar into this one are features of the software and not editing style, I don't know, but in many cases they are. If you want "edit this page" and "recent changes" etc. links at the top of the page too, then why don't you instead argue for the software to add them? I happen to think heirarchical categorization and index pages are a good idea in general, but writing them manually is '''totally''' the wrong approach and just creates '''more''' maintenance headaches. Instead of doing this stuff by hand and creating more work for other people, why not argue that the certain features of other wiki software that aren't available in Wikit should be incorporated into it? Sigh. I keep trying to stay out of this but I couldn't bite my tongue anymore. I'm sure you'll keep bulldozing along no matter what I or anyone else says. (P.S. please, ''don't'' create a page to argue with me about this or go spreading out even more to my personal page. Thank you.) ---- [Robert Abitbol] Thanks for your edit. Any comments on the system explained above? ---- [CMcC] I have some. I suggest that the person or people answering the question would also be the best equipped to decide how it should be integrated with the rest of the Wiki. I have reviewed some of the pages created recently to hold Q&A, and the most worrying thing I have noticed is that the Q&A are being shunted to completely inappropriate pages, grouped and 'indexed' completely the wrong way because (this is a general principle:) '''nobody in the community is qualified or sufficiently expert in every aspect of the technology to be able to categorise all possible questions and answers''' Since this is a collaborative project, and most of us operate from a position of mutual respect, it follows that we should be in a position to respect one another's expertise. I think that if the person asking the question trusts the person answering it to give them information, it is incumbent upon us as a community to respect the answerer's best efforts in integrating the question with the rest of the Wiki. '''So I would modify''' the 'possible system' to remain just that - one possible, but not mandatory system which the answerer of a question could use to integrate the Q&A. I don't believe that any one system represents the best way to integrate Q&A into the Wiki, nor can it. I don't believe that anyone has the expertise to categorise Q&A better than the person who finally chooses to answer a Q, and that categorisation includes the choice of optimal disposition/integration approaches. I suggest that [RA] put up a template for this possible method, and people in a position to know will choose it when it's appropriate. I think it would be worthwhile, here and now, to enumerate some of the possible systems for disposition and integration of Q&A: 0. put the Q&A in an [RA]-supplied template (to be written) 1. delete the Q&A 2. leave the Q&A where it is. 3. copy the Q&A exactly as it is, to an established page 4. rearrange the Q&A and distribute it among one or several pages 5. create a new topic page built around the question 6. anything else that seems best to the answerer of the question. I would find any of the above acceptable actions on the part of a person sufficiently clued to answer the question in the first place. I would find none of the above acceptable on the part of someone not sufficiently clued to answer the question. ----