Recently, due to my current occupation, I have been widely using the "open source" MATLAB library EIDORS. It is a quite specific library of the fields of electrical impedance tomography (EIT) and diffuse optical tomography, that are not the most common tomographic techniques around.
The software is quite nice, and it has implemented quite complex algorithms very useful in the field, but it lacks documentation. There are just a few non-consistent examples of very different algorithms without any link/reference/explanation (most of them) and the "browse docs" link just redirects you to a page where the headers of the .m (MATLAB) files are highlighted.
At the moment I can use the software a an average user (I guess), but it makes me think that I would totally liked to have a Stack Overflow-like question place to ask my newbie (and not that newbie) questions about it when I was learning. So the thought of opening a new tag on Stack Overflow has crossed my mind several times. I think that if I would open it and ask/answer some questions on Stack Overflow about the topic, lost EIDORS users will start asking more questions and having useful information somewhere.
Note that I totally understand that the documentation is not strong for this library as they are maintained by very few people and the topic is not extremely wide around the world, so creating an own forum would be very time consuming for the maintainers.
So after all the waffling around my question:
By the mighty rules of Stack Overflow: Am I encouraged to start asking and answering some basic questions about the library, opening a tag about it (EIDORS
)? Or as it is a quite narrow field/library it won't be of much benefit for the "internets".
Another concern I have is that if I start opening questions and posting answers about it I may be seen as an "upvote vampire", and I definitely am not thinking of doing this for that reason!
date-of-birth
so I don't know that the rules for tag creation are all that serious.bananas
if I want (as I have >1500 rep), but I am asking more "should I?" than "can I?".