[410] in Humor

home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post

HUMOR: Zen and Software Documentation

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (abennett@MIT.EDU)
Mon Aug 15 17:14:30 1994

From: abennett@MIT.EDU
To: humor@MIT.EDU
Date: Mon, 15 Aug 94 17:10:39 EDT


Date: Mon, 15 Aug 94 12:58:19 PDT
From: Connie_Kleinjans@Novell.COM (Connie Kleinjans)
From: bev@ccmail.com

ZEN AND THE ART OF SOFTWARE DOCUMENTATION

(Translated from the P'u-t'ung hua dialect by W.C.Carlson)

Editor's Note: The following are excerpts from the only known treatise on Zen 
Software Documentation.  Called "H'ring-chu-tsu", which literally translates to 
"Ink of Several Insignificant Matters", this treatise was written in 12th 
century Japan by the scholarly monk E'm-ie-T'i.  That it discusses Software 
documentation - predating the advent of software by some 850 years - is but 
another of the mysteries of those who walk the true path.


On Preparing to Write of Software

To prepare for the writing of Software, the writer must first become one with 
it, sometimes two.  Software is untasteable, opalescent, transparent; the user 
sees not the software, so the writer must see through it.  Spend long, quiet 
mornings in meditation. Do not sharpen the mind, but rather blunt it by doing 
Zen crosswords.  (Ed. note:  Zen crosswords are done by consulting only the 
"Down" clues; and always in the mind, never on paper.)

The mind should be rooted but flexible, as a long stemmed flower faces the
sun yet bends with the wind. Think not of compound adjectives because they tend 
to wire the mind in two directions.  Rather, consider the snowflake, which 
radiates in beauty in any and all directions. Partake of strong drink.

Do not study the Software; let it study you.  Allow the Software admission to 
your mind, but keep it in the cheap seats.  Let it flow around you at its own 
pace. Do not disturb or dismay it, but keep it from your private parts because 
it tends to coalesce there.

When the Software is with you, you will know it. It will lead your mind where it
should be, and prepare you for the narcolepsy that is certain to follow. You 
will know when the Software is with you, and so will others. You will smile with
an inner smile. Typewriters will frighten you. You will fall down a lot.


On Writing of Software

The first exercise in writing Software documentation is the Haiku. Haiku are 17 
syllable poem forms in which many ideas of a single concept are reduced - nay, 
distilled - into a short, impressionistic poem.  For example, the Haiku for 
preparing to write of Software goes:

Emptiness on paper;
Fleeting thoughts.
Red Sox play at Fenway's
Green Park.

Write Haiku describing the particular Software that will eventually grace your 
manual.  By concentrating on the Software's form and function in a concise, 
subliminal, truly meaningless Haiku verse, you have transcended the Software, 
and you can then write the true manual.

The following Haiku is from a Zen manual on data transmission:

How swiftly whirls the disk;
Data leaps to the floating head
And is known.

And this on the art of hardware maintenance:

The smell of hot P.C. card,
Blank screen, no bell,
New parts will be needed .

And another Haiku, this one on debugging:

All the lights are frozen;
The cursor blinks blandly.
Soon, I shall see the dump.

Let the Haiku thoughts free your mind from your fingers.  Your fingers will 
write what must be written. Soon you will be in Doc. Prep.


On the Review Cycle

This is the murkiest path.  Storms gather and disperse around you in many 
directions, none of which are in English.  The path becomes unclear as many 
ideas compete for attention. Some of them are fatal.

But the writer of Zen Software documentation fears not the turbulence of review 
cycles. Let it storm around you and be dry, warm, and safe in the knowledge that
you have written the pure manual. Anyway, you know the printer. You shall, in 
the end, have it your way.


home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post