On Thu, 2011-09-22 at 13:05 +0200, Ralf Hemmecke wrote: > > Besides, in my opinion (it is only my opinion, but still it is opinion > > of newcomer) HyperDoc documentaion is structured in non-standard fasion, > > which makes it not so easy to use at the beginning. > > It's not just your opinion. But there is currently not enough manpower > to treat every aspect of this big system. And if you look at the > sources, you'll find that they are written in hypertex, which is close > to tex, but has some hyperlinking features. There is no browser version
Actually, Axiom has a browser version (books/bookvol11.pamphlet) It is being redesigned to use HTML5 rather than straight HTML. > since someone would have to translate (or automatically convert) the > hypertex sources into html. Furthermore some of the sources, in > particular the API descriptions are written in the source code itself as > ++ comments. These are currently automatically extracted from the code > and made available to HyperDoc. ...[snip]... > > (that's why I was wondering about diagrams, as I thought they could help > > me to build hierarchies of Domains of categories - diagram given on the > > axiom-developers.org <http://axiom-developers.org> is too big to be usable). > > There are two quite usable diagrams in the original Axiom book by > Jenks&Sutor. I don't however know whether these (smaller) hierarchies > exist somewhere in the net. The endpapers from the original book are in src/doc/endpaper.pamphlet or on the web at http://axiom-developer.org/axiom-website/endpaper.pdf _______________________________________________ Axiom-developer mailing list Axiom-developer@nongnu.org https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/axiom-developer