Lemmy’s API documentation currently appears to be the JS client implementation found here: https://join-lemmy.org/api/

This is very misleading, as these docs document the behavior of the JS client and do not provide a language neutral way to figure out what’s going on.

Compare Lemmy’s docs with something like the ActivityPub docs https://www.w3.org/TR/activitypub/

Going off ActivityPub, I could actually start to see how it all works and looks together. With Lemmy, I can reason about how the JS client works and do my best, but working with Lemmy you sometimes have to consume the Rust source as well.

So, this raises the barrier of entry for someone wanting to do Lemmy integrations to someone that needs to consume the above docs, plus be comfortable reading JS and Rust.

I saw some older posts from the lemmy devs saying: “Well, writing docs is hard, so it’s easier if we generate the docs from our JS client.”

They aren’t wrong, writing documentation IS hard. If Lemmy is serious about attracting a larger ecosystem, I consider better API documentation to be on the hot path. I’m concerned that the devs are happy with the autogenerated docs above and won’t put any effort into improving them. Even worse, the people generating these docs are already familiar with Lemmy, so they probably think the current docs are adequate.

I don’t know a quick solution – raise money to pay someone to write docs? No clue. But, if you want to attract developers to this ecosystem, the current API documentation is insufficient.

  • frozen
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    21 year ago

    I agree. I was planning on making an API library for dotnet, but having to copy the JS client types, manually convert them, it was all just a huge a hassle. It’s in a half-completed state on my hard drive somewhere because I got bored.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      41 year ago

      Yep… and if you and I got discouraged, how many other developers did as well? This is why good docs are essential for a healthy ecosystem.