You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to users@flex.apache.org by mo...@comcast.net on 2014/01/23 17:54:38 UTC

how about "cookbook" website for Apache Flex?

All this talk about an Apache flex book got me thinking about what I would like to read. 

As a newcomer to Flex, I learned so much from this website http://blog.flexexamples.com , but it seems a lot of the examples are no longer live (what's up with that?), and many are outdated. I spend most of my development learning about Flex from Google searches that brought me to peoples' blogs. I bought the Flex Bible, which was great for the basics, but didn't answer all of those one-off questions like the blogs tackled (because the writers couldn't find it anywhere else I suppose). Now those blog links are starting to go away, and they're so hard to find anyway. 

Why not have a separate section of the Apache Flex website dedicated to examples that USERS can upload for others to run and view the source code? 

It would be like http://blog.flexexamples.com, except the content is driven by users and relevant to life with current SDKs. The critical part of the website would be just to provide an infrastructure for people to easily contribute their work. It might also include some search capability or other navigational aid, and a comments section for each example so discussions can follow. Then the users take over... 

I just think people learn by doing and if a website can be created with some basic infrastructure, it can grow organically over time and be a great resource to newcomers. It would also show that people are actively working and contributing to Flex (I envision future marketing efforts could say "...over 100 examples were added just this last month..." as a metric for Flex's growing relevance). The advantage over a published cookbook is that a book requires a dedicated team with long hours, it becomes outdated with newer SDK releases, covers a limited number of topics, and it's not interactive. Anyway, that's just my 2 cents for what I'd like to see from Apache Flex. 




Re: how about "cookbook" website for Apache Flex?

Posted by Joseph Balderson <ne...@joeflash.ca>.
:)

_______________________________________________________________________

Joseph Balderson, Flex & Flash Platform Developer :: http://joeflash.ca
Author, Professional Flex 3 :: http://tinyurl.com/proflex3book

modjklist@comcast.net wrote:
> Thanks Joseph, I read them just now, and, you are my hero! Glad to see some new efforts underway. Would be nice if there was a path others could provide examples as well... all on one site (which is specifically designed for this; not the Apache Flex blog which covers many other things). I'm thinking hundreds and hundreds of examples from simple to more complex. I spend so much time Googling for current examples scattered around the internet, it's not productive. Looking forward to whatever results. 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> 
> From: "Joseph Balderson" <ne...@joeflash.ca> 
> To: users@flex.apache.org 
> Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2014 2:37:09 PM 
> Subject: Re: how about "cookbook" website for Apache Flex? 
> 
> See "Apache Flex Examples" and "Apache Flex Examples Proposal" threads on the 
> dev@flex.apache.org list. 
> 
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> 
> Joseph Balderson, Flex & Flash Platform Developer :: http://joeflash.ca 
> Author, Professional Flex 3 :: http://tinyurl.com/proflex3book 
> 
> modjklist@comcast.net wrote: 
>> All this talk about an Apache flex book got me thinking about what I would like to read. 
>>
>> As a newcomer to Flex, I learned so much from this website http://blog.flexexamples.com , but it seems a lot of the examples are no longer live (what's up with that?), and many are outdated. I spend most of my development learning about Flex from Google searches that brought me to peoples' blogs. I bought the Flex Bible, which was great for the basics, but didn't answer all of those one-off questions like the blogs tackled (because the writers couldn't find it anywhere else I suppose). Now those blog links are starting to go away, and they're so hard to find anyway. 
>>
>> Why not have a separate section of the Apache Flex website dedicated to examples that USERS can upload for others to run and view the source code? 
>>
>> It would be like http://blog.flexexamples.com, except the content is driven by users and relevant to life with current SDKs. The critical part of the website would be just to provide an infrastructure for people to easily contribute their work. It might also include some search capability or other navigational aid, and a comments section for each example so discussions can follow. Then the users take over... 
>>
>> I just think people learn by doing and if a website can be created with some basic infrastructure, it can grow organically over time and be a great resource to newcomers. It would also show that people are actively working and contributing to Flex (I envision future marketing efforts could say "...over 100 examples were added just this last month..." as a metric for Flex's growing relevance). The advantage over a published cookbook is that a book requires a dedicated team with long hours, it becomes outdated with newer SDK releases, covers a limited number of topics, and it's not interactive. Anyway, that's just my 2 cents for what I'd like to see from Apache Flex. 
>>
>>
>>
>>
> 
> 

Re: how about "cookbook" website for Apache Flex?

Posted by mo...@comcast.net.
Thanks Joseph, I read them just now, and, you are my hero! Glad to see some new efforts underway. Would be nice if there was a path others could provide examples as well... all on one site (which is specifically designed for this; not the Apache Flex blog which covers many other things). I'm thinking hundreds and hundreds of examples from simple to more complex. I spend so much time Googling for current examples scattered around the internet, it's not productive. Looking forward to whatever results. 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Joseph Balderson" <ne...@joeflash.ca> 
To: users@flex.apache.org 
Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2014 2:37:09 PM 
Subject: Re: how about "cookbook" website for Apache Flex? 

See "Apache Flex Examples" and "Apache Flex Examples Proposal" threads on the 
dev@flex.apache.org list. 

_______________________________________________________________________ 

Joseph Balderson, Flex & Flash Platform Developer :: http://joeflash.ca 
Author, Professional Flex 3 :: http://tinyurl.com/proflex3book 

modjklist@comcast.net wrote: 
> All this talk about an Apache flex book got me thinking about what I would like to read. 
> 
> As a newcomer to Flex, I learned so much from this website http://blog.flexexamples.com , but it seems a lot of the examples are no longer live (what's up with that?), and many are outdated. I spend most of my development learning about Flex from Google searches that brought me to peoples' blogs. I bought the Flex Bible, which was great for the basics, but didn't answer all of those one-off questions like the blogs tackled (because the writers couldn't find it anywhere else I suppose). Now those blog links are starting to go away, and they're so hard to find anyway. 
> 
> Why not have a separate section of the Apache Flex website dedicated to examples that USERS can upload for others to run and view the source code? 
> 
> It would be like http://blog.flexexamples.com, except the content is driven by users and relevant to life with current SDKs. The critical part of the website would be just to provide an infrastructure for people to easily contribute their work. It might also include some search capability or other navigational aid, and a comments section for each example so discussions can follow. Then the users take over... 
> 
> I just think people learn by doing and if a website can be created with some basic infrastructure, it can grow organically over time and be a great resource to newcomers. It would also show that people are actively working and contributing to Flex (I envision future marketing efforts could say "...over 100 examples were added just this last month..." as a metric for Flex's growing relevance). The advantage over a published cookbook is that a book requires a dedicated team with long hours, it becomes outdated with newer SDK releases, covers a limited number of topics, and it's not interactive. Anyway, that's just my 2 cents for what I'd like to see from Apache Flex. 
> 
> 
> 
> 


Re: how about "cookbook" website for Apache Flex?

Posted by Joseph Balderson <ne...@joeflash.ca>.
See "Apache Flex Examples" and "Apache Flex Examples Proposal" threads on the
dev@flex.apache.org list.

_______________________________________________________________________

Joseph Balderson, Flex & Flash Platform Developer :: http://joeflash.ca
Author, Professional Flex 3 :: http://tinyurl.com/proflex3book

modjklist@comcast.net wrote:
> All this talk about an Apache flex book got me thinking about what I would like to read. 
> 
> As a newcomer to Flex, I learned so much from this website http://blog.flexexamples.com , but it seems a lot of the examples are no longer live (what's up with that?), and many are outdated. I spend most of my development learning about Flex from Google searches that brought me to peoples' blogs. I bought the Flex Bible, which was great for the basics, but didn't answer all of those one-off questions like the blogs tackled (because the writers couldn't find it anywhere else I suppose). Now those blog links are starting to go away, and they're so hard to find anyway. 
> 
> Why not have a separate section of the Apache Flex website dedicated to examples that USERS can upload for others to run and view the source code? 
> 
> It would be like http://blog.flexexamples.com, except the content is driven by users and relevant to life with current SDKs. The critical part of the website would be just to provide an infrastructure for people to easily contribute their work. It might also include some search capability or other navigational aid, and a comments section for each example so discussions can follow. Then the users take over... 
> 
> I just think people learn by doing and if a website can be created with some basic infrastructure, it can grow organically over time and be a great resource to newcomers. It would also show that people are actively working and contributing to Flex (I envision future marketing efforts could say "...over 100 examples were added just this last month..." as a metric for Flex's growing relevance). The advantage over a published cookbook is that a book requires a dedicated team with long hours, it becomes outdated with newer SDK releases, covers a limited number of topics, and it's not interactive. Anyway, that's just my 2 cents for what I'd like to see from Apache Flex. 
> 
> 
> 
>