Hi all,
I've used the Teensy in about 10 projects now and find myself looking for the same information most of the time. I've also introduced the Teensy to a few others and end up explaining the basics to them. So I started to do some documentation for myself & friends and realized that it's within scope to release to the community. I then took this chance to learn some new web technologies (Jekyll & Liquid) so I've started a publically accessible mini-site that is easy for the community to submit edits to.
http://teensybase.github.io
I don't see this as wasted effort if a wiki does come out; firstly it seems that Paul has a million other worthy things to do so it'll be good to take the pressure off for a while. Secondly all the pages are written in Markdown which any decent wiki should support for migration. There is also the potential that a documentation mini-site and a wiki are two things that have different scopes anyway and could exist concurrently.
This is all hosted on GitHub and I'm open to any pull requests with additional content/corrections.
Instructions on running teensybase on your local computer are here: http://teensybase.github.io/teensybase/contributing/
There are empty pages; I'm waiting for a good chance to take some pictures of the boards or get Paul's permission to use his with source attribution.
I hope you all have a great Christmas; I shall be learning as much as I can about Teensy and writing it up!
I've used the Teensy in about 10 projects now and find myself looking for the same information most of the time. I've also introduced the Teensy to a few others and end up explaining the basics to them. So I started to do some documentation for myself & friends and realized that it's within scope to release to the community. I then took this chance to learn some new web technologies (Jekyll & Liquid) so I've started a publically accessible mini-site that is easy for the community to submit edits to.
http://teensybase.github.io
I don't see this as wasted effort if a wiki does come out; firstly it seems that Paul has a million other worthy things to do so it'll be good to take the pressure off for a while. Secondly all the pages are written in Markdown which any decent wiki should support for migration. There is also the potential that a documentation mini-site and a wiki are two things that have different scopes anyway and could exist concurrently.
This is all hosted on GitHub and I'm open to any pull requests with additional content/corrections.
Instructions on running teensybase on your local computer are here: http://teensybase.github.io/teensybase/contributing/
There are empty pages; I'm waiting for a good chance to take some pictures of the boards or get Paul's permission to use his with source attribution.
I hope you all have a great Christmas; I shall be learning as much as I can about Teensy and writing it up!