Cobra Forum

Other Discussion and Support => Tutorials => Topic started by: mahesh on Nov 13, 2023, 06:50 AM

Title: Tutorials Sub-forum – Guidelines
Post by: mahesh on Nov 13, 2023, 06:50 AM
CRITERIA FOR POSTING TUTORIALS

The official flavours are Ubuntu itself, as well as Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Edubuntu, Lubuntu, UbuntuGnome, Ubuntu Studio, Mythbuntu, Ubuntu Mate, and Ubuntu Kylin..
This should go without saying, but any tutorial which is condescending or otherwise contravenes forum policy will be removed.
Please do not assume that your reader understands how to compile source code, or which dependencies are necessary to get started. Make sure you mention all the steps required to finish the tutorial, and don't assume your reader will have information you omitted.
A good tutorial is educational and visually appealing. Include proper code boxes, highlighted instructions and clean spacing, along with screenshots if possible. Tutorials that are difficult to follow, haphazard or unformatted will be removed.
In a situation where you are giving instructions to another user, it is important to be as clear as possible. If a tutorial is difficult to understand, or uses broken English or slang (that includes leet, or anything that resembles it), it will be removed.
A tutorial that closes with "I'll post more on that later" will be removed, as will tutorials that suggest reading other pages to complete a task.
If you are borrowing an idea or a procedure from another source, you should give credit to that author and link to their explanation. This is not only polite, but it also gives the reader the chance to get more information or help.
Copying a wiki page or a tutorial from another forum and pasting it here is plagiarism, and is a violation of the forum Code of Conduct. If your tutorial has been stolen from another source and you do not offer credit to the original author or meet the author's licensing requirements, it will be deleted.
It is impossible for forum members to judge the technical merit of your tutorial. For that reason, you should include as much information as possible on how your tutorial was tested -- that includes hardware and software, as well as the release edition or any other technical points you can offer.
Your explanation should include a process for reversing the changes, uninstalling the software or otherwise restoring the original condition of a system. This is an added precaution in the case that your method doesn't succeed, and a reader is left with an incomplete system or broken package.
The following items are not considered as tutorials.


If a tutorial is found to fall short of these guidelines it will be removed from public view.

If you have a question about these criteria or would like any clarification, please post a thread in Forum Feedback and Help, and a staff member will assist you. Thanks.

(This post is a collaborative effort by the forum staff.)[/li]
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