this post was submitted on 14 Aug 2023
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While I get the sentiment, historically, readmes have been text only, and should predominately focus on usage options, not a sales pitch. Today in GitHub, these files support markdown, but the level of effort is probably two orders of magnitude higher than a text readme alone.
Think of a readme file on GitHub/distributed with the binary more as a man page than a proper website.
So why not add a 'Screenshots' section with hyperlinks to PNG files?
Or, hell, just add a "screenshots" folder to the repo and mention its existence in the readme.
The best solution is to create an issue and attach the pictures there. You can then link in README and not bloat the repository.
If I clone the repo I expect everything to work, including the readme.
That's a good point non-text shouldn't be in the git tree, git-lfs is another solution for that though
I mean, yes, it's a little more effort, but I think you're over playing how much effort is required. Writing a half decent readme is vastly easier than frankly any feature or bug fix. Taking a couple of notable screenshots is super easy. Writing docs is hard (I've written tons for large and complicated projects), but readmes are the easiest and including screenshots is really quite easy.
Everywhere supports markdown in readmes now. Literally everywhere I've ever hosted code. And markdown with links to images is perfectly fine even if viewed in plain text mode. They'll just click the link and view the image standalone. I've done that plenty of times, too. Every editor (plus in-browser code hosts in plain text mode) makes it easy.