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Re: postgresql book - practical or something newer?

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Christopher Browne wrote:
On Jan 31, 2008 4:40 PM, Guy Rouillier <guyr-ml1@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Robert Treat wrote:

Just so you know, I approached OReally about writing a PostgreSQL Cookbook,
and they turned it down. They did offer me some other titles, but those don't
seem to have gone anywhere.
As someone else pointed out in this thread, very much of what you need
to know has been previously discussed at one point; the hard part is
finding it.

What we need is for some of the people with the big brains ;) to come up
with some new kind of "hyperbook".  That would be the documentation in
some form similar to what it is today, but somehow connected to the
discussions that happen in the mailing lists.  That way, when something
really insightful or helpful gets said in the mailing lists, it can get
connected to a particular place in the documentation.  Then over time,
the doc maintainers can take the best of those and incorporate them
directly into the docs at the appropriate place.

The trouble is that this is nearly as much trouble as actually writing
a book, and doesn't provide a clear incentive for people to put in the
effort of making it happen.

There's the problem (and it is, to a degree, truly a problem) that the
"postgreSQL book" market hasn't been lucrative enough to draw people
into writing books.  And honestly, it *needs* to be more lucrative.
If I'm thinking about alternative uses for my spare time, writing does
not appear to be a particularly profitable use.

Finding a "poor man's way" to generate a "hyperbook" actually needs
much the same sorts of skills and efforts, even though it probably
provides those that provide the effort with *less* benefits.
Personally I'm surprised that the last couple responses seem to center around not being able to make much money off of it. I agree that it would require some time investment, but so did building PG in the first place. Countless people have already sacrificed hours upon hours of their time with no return on their investment except pride in their work and a better overall product for everybody to use. I'm not a talented enough programmer to contribute to the code, but in this way I can do something to give back to the pg community.

--
Tom Hart
IT Specialist
Cooperative Federal
723 Westcott St.
Syracuse, NY 13210
(315) 471-1116 ext. 202
(315) 476-0567 (fax)


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