Dear Guix (and guile users, who I've Cc'd),
My apologies for turning this in last minute. There had been discussion about
this proposal on the guix mailing list, and I had missed that I need to submit
a formal proposal until roptat mentioned it at Fosdem. Nonetheles here it is:
* TITLE: A Deep Dive into the Guile Documentation & Makeover Proposal
* FORMAT: Standard Talk
* LENGTH: Approximately 30 minutes (pre-recorded)
* SUMMARY:
Recent discussions on the Guix mailing list revealed that many in the Guix
community have found the Guile Reference Manual difficult to navigate as
newcomers. That should come as no surprise -- in PDF form, the docs span
approximately /850 pages/, making it a quite hefty set of documents for an
implementation of a minimal programming language like Scheme, even when
compared to the documentation of relatively large PLs; the Racket Guide, for
instance, is only 450 pages, while the Rust Book is approximately 550 pages.
Serving at once as a referrence manual & API specification, the large size may
in part be attributed to what simultaneously makes Guile an appealing project to
contribute to, while also rendering the documentation process somewhat delicate:
Guile is a massive collective project featuring the contributions of many authors
over the course of three decades, contributions which Guilers would hate to
trivialize or treat as insignificant or edit away on a whim. Additionally, Guile
comes from a long set of traditions within Scheme hacking which itself is deep with
sage wisdom spanning many pedagogical philosophies and one of the greatest
literature traditions of hacker culture. Is it possible to perform a makeover of
the Guile Documentation while respecting these historical threads, at once
rendering it more approachable for new users while not forsaking the deep nuggets
of wisdom that lie therein?
Since mid-December I have been mulling over these questions as newcomer, both studying
& analyzing the docs, and trying to come to grips with it's strengths and
shortcomings. For this talk, I will present my research to the Guix community,
culminating with a plan for a full makeover of the existing docs which would respect
the above concerns. I will use the 5 minute presentation to focus on the plan of
action, with hopes that during the Q&A we can come to consensus on what is to be
done. The decisions made by the group will form the basis of a proposal to be made to
the Guile community, and once everyone is in agreement with plans for how to move
forward I will undertake the effort to implement the makeover proposal.
Additionally, as a newcomer to Guix, I will use the first 10 minutes of my talk to
briefly introduce my work and how I'm using Guix & Guile to create a remotely
deployed large-scale public interactive video mapping installation commissioned by
the city of Singapore which will be installed in Marina Bay at the heart of the
city this summer for 8 weeks from June - August 2022.
* BIO:
Blake Shaw is a media artist and theorist most well known as one of the
founders of the SWEATSHOPPE urban media art collective. His works have been
shown in over 40 cities on every continent of the world (excluding Antarctica)
at venues including: The Venice Biennale (2017), The Brooklyn Museum, Akademie
de Kunste Berlin, The Museum of the Moving Image, The Biennial of the America,
Luminato (Toronto), The Media Architecture Biennale, and the Museum of
Contemporary Art Zagreb. His work have been featured in publications including
The New York Times and the Atlantic, and online they have been viewed over 30
million times across various channels. He holds a Masters degree in Philosophy
from the EGS Switzerland, and was pursuing a PhD in the Philosophy of
Mathematics under the supervision of Boris Groys prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.