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(While we are at it.) (its = possessive, it's = "it is" or "it has". See for example <http://www.wikihow.com/Use-Its-and-It%27s>.)
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Peter Mortensen
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First of all, Stack Overflow is not a site were you'll find tutorial, courses or training material. That kind of content doesn't fit well in the Q and A model.

And you already noticed that unleashing the shared knowledge of all those experienced users here by asking to recommend some books, videos, etc. is not welcome and rather harshly close voted and down voteddownvoted.

There is how everhowever a carefully kept secret source of knowledge. It is so special it only gets revealed when asked for and after that the messenger is ki.....

You may have noticed that questions have tags, like , and . All tags have an excerpt and a wiki.

The excerpt is the small text that you see when you hover over the tag. It explains in a few words when the tag should be used.

If you click on the tag however you'll find just under the excerpt the learn more... link. If you click that the secret world is revealed to you. More often than not high-rep users spend time to add references to off-site resources, official documentation, often asked duplicates, etc. It is the place to find off-site recommendations.

tag wiki with learn more linkTag wiki with learn more link

Maybe you're not so lucky about the topic you choose and it'sits accompanying tag and you find the tag wiki is empty. In that case you can start creating one and fill it with the resource you find while doing your research on Google, vendor sites, etc. You can even ask a question on Meta to see if the community wants to help you create/edit/update that wiki.

You'll find a few blog post about tags and their wiki's here and here.

And finally there are some posts from the early ages of Stack Overflow. Searching for them will find interesting historical locked posts, as pointed out by Bhargav Rao.

First of all, Stack Overflow is not a site were you'll find tutorial, courses or training material. That kind of content doesn't fit well in the Q and A model.

And you already noticed that unleashing the shared knowledge of all those experienced users here by asking to recommend some books, videos etc is not welcome and rather harshly close voted and down voted.

There is how ever a carefully kept secret source of knowledge. It is so special it only gets revealed when asked for and after that the messenger is ki.....

You may have noticed that questions have tags, like , and . All tags have an excerpt and a wiki.

The excerpt is the small text that you see when you hover over the tag. It explains in a few words when the tag should be used.

If you click on the tag however you'll find just under the excerpt the learn more... link. If you click that the secret world is revealed to you. More often than not high-rep users spend time to add references to off-site resources, official documentation, often asked duplicates, etc. It is the place to find off-site recommendations.

tag wiki with learn more link

Maybe you're not so lucky about the topic you choose and it's accompanying tag and you find the tag wiki is empty. In that case you can start creating one and fill it with the resource you find while doing your research on Google, vendor sites etc. You can even ask a question on Meta to see if the community wants to help you create/edit/update that wiki.

You'll find a few blog post about tags and their wiki's here and here

And finally there are some posts from the early ages of Stack Overflow. Searching for them will find interesting historical locked posts, as pointed out by Bhargav Rao

First of all, Stack Overflow is not a site were you'll find tutorial, courses or training material. That kind of content doesn't fit well in the Q and A model.

And you already noticed that unleashing the shared knowledge of all those experienced users here by asking to recommend some books, videos, etc. is not welcome and rather harshly close voted and downvoted.

There is however a carefully kept secret source of knowledge. It is so special it only gets revealed when asked for and after that the messenger is ki.....

You may have noticed that questions have tags, like , and . All tags have an excerpt and a wiki.

The excerpt is the small text that you see when you hover over the tag. It explains in a few words when the tag should be used.

If you click on the tag however you'll find just under the excerpt the learn more... link. If you click that the secret world is revealed to you. More often than not high-rep users spend time to add references to off-site resources, official documentation, often asked duplicates, etc. It is the place to find off-site recommendations.

Tag wiki with learn more link

Maybe you're not so lucky about the topic you choose and its accompanying tag and you find the tag wiki is empty. In that case you can start creating one and fill it with the resource you find while doing your research on Google, vendor sites, etc. You can even ask a question on Meta to see if the community wants to help you create/edit/update that wiki.

You'll find a few blog post about tags and their wiki's here and here.

And finally there are some posts from the early ages of Stack Overflow. Searching for them will find interesting historical locked posts, as pointed out by Bhargav Rao.

Documentation is no longer a thing.
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user4639281
user4639281

First of all, Stack Overflow is not a site were you'll find tutorial, courses or training material. That kind of content doesn't fit well in the Q and A model.

And you already noticed that unleashing the shared knowledge of all those experienced users here by asking to recommend some books, videos etc is not welcome and rather harshly close voted and down voted.

There is how ever a carefully kept secret source of knowledge. It is so special it only gets revealed when asked for and after that the messenger is ki.....

You may have noticed that questions have tags, like , and . All tags have an excerpt and a wiki.

The excerpt is the small text that you see when you hover over the tag. It explains in a few words when the tag should be used.

If you click on the tag however you'll find just under the excerpt the learn more... link. If you click that the secret world is revealed to you. More often than not high-rep users spend time to add references to off-site resources, official documentation, often asked duplicates, etc. It is the place to find off-site recommendations.

tag wiki with learn more link

Maybe you're not so lucky about the topic you choose and it's accompanying tag and you find the tag wiki is empty. In that case you can start creating one and fill it with the resource you find while doing your research on Google, vendor sites etc. You can even ask a question on Meta to see if the community wants to help you create/edit/update that wiki.

You'll find a few blog post about tags and their wiki's here and here

And finally there are some posts from the early ages of Stack Overflow. Searching for them will find interesting historical locked posts, as pointed out by Bhargav Rao

It is maybe to early to call but the initiative for Warlords of Documentation: A Proposed Expansion of Stack Overflow might be interesting to follow.

First of all, Stack Overflow is not a site were you'll find tutorial, courses or training material. That kind of content doesn't fit well in the Q and A model.

And you already noticed that unleashing the shared knowledge of all those experienced users here by asking to recommend some books, videos etc is not welcome and rather harshly close voted and down voted.

There is how ever a carefully kept secret source of knowledge. It is so special it only gets revealed when asked for and after that the messenger is ki.....

You may have noticed that questions have tags, like , and . All tags have an excerpt and a wiki.

The excerpt is the small text that you see when you hover over the tag. It explains in a few words when the tag should be used.

If you click on the tag however you'll find just under the excerpt the learn more... link. If you click that the secret world is revealed to you. More often than not high-rep users spend time to add references to off-site resources, official documentation, often asked duplicates, etc. It is the place to find off-site recommendations.

tag wiki with learn more link

Maybe you're not so lucky about the topic you choose and it's accompanying tag and you find the tag wiki is empty. In that case you can start creating one and fill it with the resource you find while doing your research on Google, vendor sites etc. You can even ask a question on Meta to see if the community wants to help you create/edit/update that wiki.

You'll find a few blog post about tags and their wiki's here and here

And finally there are some posts from the early ages of Stack Overflow. Searching for them will find interesting historical locked posts, as pointed out by Bhargav Rao

It is maybe to early to call but the initiative for Warlords of Documentation: A Proposed Expansion of Stack Overflow might be interesting to follow.

First of all, Stack Overflow is not a site were you'll find tutorial, courses or training material. That kind of content doesn't fit well in the Q and A model.

And you already noticed that unleashing the shared knowledge of all those experienced users here by asking to recommend some books, videos etc is not welcome and rather harshly close voted and down voted.

There is how ever a carefully kept secret source of knowledge. It is so special it only gets revealed when asked for and after that the messenger is ki.....

You may have noticed that questions have tags, like , and . All tags have an excerpt and a wiki.

The excerpt is the small text that you see when you hover over the tag. It explains in a few words when the tag should be used.

If you click on the tag however you'll find just under the excerpt the learn more... link. If you click that the secret world is revealed to you. More often than not high-rep users spend time to add references to off-site resources, official documentation, often asked duplicates, etc. It is the place to find off-site recommendations.

tag wiki with learn more link

Maybe you're not so lucky about the topic you choose and it's accompanying tag and you find the tag wiki is empty. In that case you can start creating one and fill it with the resource you find while doing your research on Google, vendor sites etc. You can even ask a question on Meta to see if the community wants to help you create/edit/update that wiki.

You'll find a few blog post about tags and their wiki's here and here

And finally there are some posts from the early ages of Stack Overflow. Searching for them will find interesting historical locked posts, as pointed out by Bhargav Rao

replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

First of all, Stack Overflow is not a site were you'll find tutorial, courses or training material. That kind of content doesn't fit well in the Q and A model.

And you already noticed that unleashing the shared knowledge of all those experienced users here by asking to recommend some books, videos etc is not welcome and rather harshly close voted and down voted.

There is how ever a carefully kept secret source of knowledge. It is so special it only gets revealed when asked for and after that the messenger is ki.....

You may have noticed that questions have tags, like , and . All tags have an excerpt and a wiki.

The excerpt is the small text that you see when you hover over the tag. It explains in a few words when the tag should be used.

If you click on the tag however you'll find just under the excerpt the learn more...learn more... link. If you click that the secret world is revealed to you. More often than not high-rep users spend time to add references to off-site resources, official documentation, often asked duplicates, etc. It is the place to find off-site recommendations.

tag wiki with learn more link

Maybe you're not so lucky about the topic you choose and it's accompanying tag and you find the tag wiki is empty. In that case you can start creating one and fill it with the resource you find while doing your research on Google, vendor sites etc. You can even ask a question on Meta to see if the community wants to help you create/edit/update that wiki.

You'll find a few blog post about tags and their wiki's here and here

And finally there are some posts from the early ages of Stack Overflow. Searching for themSearching for them will find interesting historical locked posts, as pointed out by Bhargav Rao

It is maybe to early to call but the initiative for Warlords of Documentation: A Proposed Expansion of Stack Overflow might be interesting to follow.

First of all, Stack Overflow is not a site were you'll find tutorial, courses or training material. That kind of content doesn't fit well in the Q and A model.

And you already noticed that unleashing the shared knowledge of all those experienced users here by asking to recommend some books, videos etc is not welcome and rather harshly close voted and down voted.

There is how ever a carefully kept secret source of knowledge. It is so special it only gets revealed when asked for and after that the messenger is ki.....

You may have noticed that questions have tags, like , and . All tags have an excerpt and a wiki.

The excerpt is the small text that you see when you hover over the tag. It explains in a few words when the tag should be used.

If you click on the tag however you'll find just under the excerpt the learn more... link. If you click that the secret world is revealed to you. More often than not high-rep users spend time to add references to off-site resources, official documentation, often asked duplicates, etc. It is the place to find off-site recommendations.

tag wiki with learn more link

Maybe you're not so lucky about the topic you choose and it's accompanying tag and you find the tag wiki is empty. In that case you can start creating one and fill it with the resource you find while doing your research on Google, vendor sites etc. You can even ask a question on Meta to see if the community wants to help you create/edit/update that wiki.

You'll find a few blog post about tags and their wiki's here and here

And finally there are some posts from the early ages of Stack Overflow. Searching for them will find interesting historical locked posts, as pointed out by Bhargav Rao

It is maybe to early to call but the initiative for Warlords of Documentation: A Proposed Expansion of Stack Overflow might be interesting to follow.

First of all, Stack Overflow is not a site were you'll find tutorial, courses or training material. That kind of content doesn't fit well in the Q and A model.

And you already noticed that unleashing the shared knowledge of all those experienced users here by asking to recommend some books, videos etc is not welcome and rather harshly close voted and down voted.

There is how ever a carefully kept secret source of knowledge. It is so special it only gets revealed when asked for and after that the messenger is ki.....

You may have noticed that questions have tags, like , and . All tags have an excerpt and a wiki.

The excerpt is the small text that you see when you hover over the tag. It explains in a few words when the tag should be used.

If you click on the tag however you'll find just under the excerpt the learn more... link. If you click that the secret world is revealed to you. More often than not high-rep users spend time to add references to off-site resources, official documentation, often asked duplicates, etc. It is the place to find off-site recommendations.

tag wiki with learn more link

Maybe you're not so lucky about the topic you choose and it's accompanying tag and you find the tag wiki is empty. In that case you can start creating one and fill it with the resource you find while doing your research on Google, vendor sites etc. You can even ask a question on Meta to see if the community wants to help you create/edit/update that wiki.

You'll find a few blog post about tags and their wiki's here and here

And finally there are some posts from the early ages of Stack Overflow. Searching for them will find interesting historical locked posts, as pointed out by Bhargav Rao

It is maybe to early to call but the initiative for Warlords of Documentation: A Proposed Expansion of Stack Overflow might be interesting to follow.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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added doc initiative
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rene
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added 290 characters in body
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rene
  • 42.3k
  • 55
  • 610
  • 777
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Source Link
rene
  • 42.3k
  • 55
  • 610
  • 777
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