- meta/method vs content:
- When I read articles, I don't just want results. I want to learn how to do things myself--reusable stuff.
- Try to orient small things in context of bigger things.
- Even if this isn't done explicitly, point of view & meta stuff can still be picked up by your readers.
- THinking in terms of a bigger picture helps to find gaps in discussion or explanation of specific examples
- so...try different things.
- turns out I'm far more efficient writing on paper than on a computer.
- don't overdo it.
- just like with coding, I found taking a break so helpful to get fresh perspective.
- simon peyton jones article on a good research paper: mostly applies
- you have to know what your point is. and have to tell your audience about it. assuming they're in passive consumption mode, or scanning to try to solve a related problem. hence:
- whatever the source of their distractedness, readers need help scanning the page.
- break up blocks of text with headings, code snippets, screenshots, pull quotes, other visuals.
- repeat yourself liberally to keep the scanning reader focused on the overall flow.
- jakob nielsen has been saying this for YEARS now. see alertbox for more.