I discovered the Documentation tab late last week, and I added to an example to the Common Lisp Getting Started topic that just contains learning resources.
In this case, "resources" means books, community websites, standards, etc. Blog posts are not deep enough or permanent enough to get one really started on a technology.
I originally added the example after seeing this done for another topic. Now my "example" has been upvoted to be on par with the other getting started example.
This was before I started doing some reading about documentation, and I'm getting the impression that:
- Examples were intended to be actual examples. So my "learning resources" example is probably wrong.
- The SO team doesn't seem very sure what documentation is going to evolve into yet.
The rules are different and a little vague for Documentation. Now my question is whether this is a place where opinion should matter. If there's a "Learning Resources" topic, and people posted specific resources as examples, upvoting the ones that are relevant, and downvoting the ones that are not, is that in line with the goal of Documentation?
Because sometimes the answer is "read the manual" but it may be hard to tell which manual to read, or which manual to read next, or which manual is good, or why the manual is good.
So is this an acceptable use of Documentation? Or do the same rules for questions on SO count?