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Most, if not all architecture documents I've seen (and developed) have been presented as a series of views (Logical, Physical, Use-case etc). Is this the preferred layout? What other styles are there?

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This may be WAY off topic, but is there anyway to use Joel's ideas on making specifications 'fun' usable is this realm?

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No it's not off topic, IMO. However, it isn't helpful, either. When architecture is a bunch of pictures, you've about hit many of Joel's points. – S.Lott Oct 7 '08 at 18:06
The humor in descriptions was the part I was thinking of. If you can make the text somewhat enjoyable to read it can be much more useful. – Fred Oct 8 '08 at 18:28
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Since it's complex, it's hard to do otherwise.

I like to start with the one-paragraph summary of the overall requirements. If there isn't a one-paragraph summary, that's -- perhaps -- the most important thing to build.

Once the summary is out of the way, there's an overview of architectural features. And after that, no one will read a single word.

It isn't a novel. There's no story arc. No drama. No conflict. No characters. At least, I can't find a way to make an architecture readable.

The best you can hope for is a reference work with enough indexes, cross references, overviews and sidebars that people use it.

Indeed, it's the pull-outs that matter. The picture are all anyone will ever use. And those will get put into PPT's for presentation internally and externally.

So, don't waste a lot of time on writing. Invest time in overviews, summaries, feature lists and pictures people want to use every day.

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