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author | Florian Hahn <flo@fhahn.com> | 2013-08-01 21:46:18 +0200 |
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committer | Florian Hahn <flo@fhahn.com> | 2013-08-01 21:46:18 +0200 |
commit | d4b1598d932aebb579658d3d5ff4ca223b62289f (patch) | |
tree | 4e0593fb4965a05faaefd293bb4a258d04e473e6 /docs | |
parent | d34130215f221df40336300bb72973650fbbd405 (diff) |
Remove using_tox.rst
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/using_tox.rst | 64 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 64 deletions
diff --git a/docs/using_tox.rst b/docs/using_tox.rst deleted file mode 100644 index 472d4ef4..00000000 --- a/docs/using_tox.rst +++ /dev/null | |||
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1 | Using Tox | ||
2 | ========= | ||
3 | |||
4 | 1. Build Tox | ||
5 | 2. Fix errors | ||
6 | 3. Consult IRC for help | ||
7 | 4. Go on debugging journy for devs | ||
8 | 5. Build Tox for real | ||
9 | 6. ??? | ||
10 | |||
11 | For all the work we've put into Tox so far, there isn't yet a decent | ||
12 | guide for how you *use* Tox. Here's a user-friendly attempt at it. | ||
13 | |||
14 | 1. Connect to the network! | ||
15 | |||
16 | - You need to connect to a bootstrapping server, to give you a | ||
17 | public key. | ||
18 | - Where can I find a public server? Right here, as of now: (the help | ||
19 | message from running nTox with no args will help) | ||
20 | |||
21 | - 198.46.136.167 33445 | ||
22 | 728925473812C7AAC482BE7250BCCAD0B8CB9F737BF3D42ABD34459C1768F854 | ||
23 | - 192.81.133.111 33445 | ||
24 | 8CD5A9BF0A6CE358BA36F7A653F99FA6B258FF756E490F52C1F98CC420F78858 | ||
25 | - 66.175.223.88 33445 | ||
26 | AC4112C975240CAD260BB2FCD134266521FAAF0A5D159C5FD3201196191E4F5D | ||
27 | - 192.184.81.118 33445 | ||
28 | 5CD7EB176C19A2FD840406CD56177BB8E75587BB366F7BB3004B19E3EDC04143 | ||
29 | |||
30 | 2. Find a friend! | ||
31 | |||
32 | - Now that you're on the network, you need a friend. To get one of | ||
33 | those, you need to to send or receive a request. What's a request, | ||
34 | you ask? It's like a friend request, but we use really scary and | ||
35 | cryptic numbers instead of names. When nTox starts, it shows your | ||
36 | *your* long, scary number, called your *public key*. Give that to | ||
37 | people, and they can add you as as "friend". Or, you can add | ||
38 | someone else, with the */f* command, if you like. | ||
39 | |||
40 | 3. Chat it up! | ||
41 | |||
42 | - Now use the */m* command to send a message to someone. Wow, you're | ||
43 | chatting! | ||
44 | |||
45 | 4. But something broke! | ||
46 | |||
47 | - Yeah, pre-alpha-alpha software tends to do that. We're working on | ||
48 | it. | ||
49 | - Please report all crashes to either the github page, or #tox-dev | ||
50 | on freenode. | ||
51 | |||
52 | 5. Nothing broke, but what does */f* mean? | ||
53 | |||
54 | - nTox parses text as a command if the first character is a | ||
55 | forward-slash ('/'). You can check all commands in commands.md. | ||
56 | |||
57 | 6. Use and support Tox! | ||
58 | |||
59 | - Code for us, debug for us, document for us, translate for us, even | ||
60 | just talk about us! | ||
61 | - The more interest we get, the more work gets done, the better Tox | ||
62 | is. | ||
63 | |||
64 | |||