Or LaTex [1]. Same advantages.

[1] http://www.latex-project.org/

On Wed, Dec 17, 2014 at 2:38 PM, Adam Taft <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Would highly recommend writing the user guide in asciidoc.  It can then be
> easily contributed/merged, etc. using normal text editing + git tools.
>
> Pro Git, 2nd Ed. is written in Asciidoc, as an example.
>
>
> https://medium.com/@chacon/living-the-future-of-technical-writing-2f368bd0a272
>
> Here is the git repository associated with the book:
>
> https://github.com/progit/progit2
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Wed, Dec 17, 2014 at 2:24 PM, Mark Payne <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > All,
> > I have started work on a NiFi User Guide (
> > https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NIFI-150). There is a lot of work
> > to be done here for sure, and I've only really started. However, what
> I've
> > written up so far may be useful to those of you who haven't had a chance
> to
> > learn NiFi yet. General terminology is described, some of the icons are
> > explained, etc.
> > So far I've been writing it Open Office. I don't know if this is the
> > format that we want to stick with, but that can easily be changed later.
> It
> > is checked into the NIFI-USER-GUIDE branch, under
> >
> nar-bundles/framework-bundle/framework/resources/src/main/resources/docs. I
> > expect to be adding quite a bit to this in the coming days.
> > Thanks-Mark
> >
> >
> >
>

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