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Peter Mortensen
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I think a hard limit of 13 examples is a bit low. Take .Net'sNET's Enumerable class for an example. There are dozens of methods to be documented, and that's before you consider all of the overloads. Yet, having a single topic for this class makes a lot of sense, doesn't it?

Just my $0.02$0.02, for whatever it's worth.

I think a hard limit of 13 examples is a bit low. Take .Net's Enumerable class for an example. There are dozens of methods to be documented, and that's before you consider all of the overloads. Yet, having a single topic for this class makes a lot of sense, doesn't it?

Just my $0.02, for whatever it's worth.

I think a hard limit of 13 examples is a bit low. Take .NET's Enumerable class for an example. There are dozens of methods to be documented, and that's before you consider all of the overloads. Yet, having a single topic for this class makes a lot of sense, doesn't it?

Just my $0.02, for whatever it's worth.

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RubberDuck
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I think a hard limit of 13 examples is a bit low. Take .Net's Enumerable class for an example. There are dozens of methods to be documented, and that's before you consider all of the overloads. Yet, having a single topic for this class makes a lot of sense, doesn't it?

Just my $0.02, for whatever it's worth.