Post by account_disabled on Dec 2, 2023 1:35:51 GMT -5
WordPress is for beginners, then what will be the purpose of that manual? Get those base users to know and appreciate WordPress. Here 2 words, 2 concepts can define the objectives of my manual: knowledge : the text must provide all the information necessary to allow the reader to take advantage of that knowledge. After reading my guide to WordPress, the reader needed to be able to use WordPress. appreciation : this is perhaps even more important, because whoever writes a manual must be able to make the reader love that topic. The reason is simple: the reader will learn faster and better. Delimit the boundaries of matter This is why I talk about planning. I studied my guide to WordPress and my guide to blogging on paper.
The latter then underwent several changes and its Phone Number Data drafting took a few years, even if in a spare time. But we need to know for sure what to include in our manual and what is better to leave out and not just for the sake of readers. We also need to know what we can take readers for granted and how much we should suggest to them. But every manual must have its boundaries. Enclose a certain number of topics which, together, define objectives and the intended audience. This path is well represented by a schedule that we make when we study our literary project. This is the main reason why I always plan on paper a manual or a novel that I have to write: this way I have an overall vision of the work and I can immediately understand whether a topic should be included before or after.
Set parts, chapters, appendices Given that everyone is free to divide the material as they wish, I usually create macro sections of my manual first. To give an example, in my WordPress guide I only had chapters and paragraphs, while the blogging guide was divided into 3 parts, each with a certain number of chapters. In both guides I also created appendices, in which I explained topics that did not find a place in the chapters but which I considered useful and in which I suggested online resources for further information. Explanatory notes were also necessary, which I preferred to insert at the end of the pages and not at the end of the chapter or, worse, at the end of the book, as many publishing houses use, forcing me to waste time looking for them.
The latter then underwent several changes and its Phone Number Data drafting took a few years, even if in a spare time. But we need to know for sure what to include in our manual and what is better to leave out and not just for the sake of readers. We also need to know what we can take readers for granted and how much we should suggest to them. But every manual must have its boundaries. Enclose a certain number of topics which, together, define objectives and the intended audience. This path is well represented by a schedule that we make when we study our literary project. This is the main reason why I always plan on paper a manual or a novel that I have to write: this way I have an overall vision of the work and I can immediately understand whether a topic should be included before or after.
Set parts, chapters, appendices Given that everyone is free to divide the material as they wish, I usually create macro sections of my manual first. To give an example, in my WordPress guide I only had chapters and paragraphs, while the blogging guide was divided into 3 parts, each with a certain number of chapters. In both guides I also created appendices, in which I explained topics that did not find a place in the chapters but which I considered useful and in which I suggested online resources for further information. Explanatory notes were also necessary, which I preferred to insert at the end of the pages and not at the end of the chapter or, worse, at the end of the book, as many publishing houses use, forcing me to waste time looking for them.