Thanks for the link. I'll look into using Documenter.jl + mkdocs. Is there 
anyway that the format can match something like Sphinx/MakeTheDocs (I don't 
really know what that is)? I like that look much better; the font from the 
Documenter.jl examples is wonky and hard to read.

On Wednesday, May 11, 2016 at 9:01:48 AM UTC-7, Tommy Hofmann wrote:
>
> What about this post?
>
> https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/julia-users/documentation/julia-users/q7rwopVQHV4/o-mDXpqhAwAJ
> Note that instead of Lexicon.jl one should use Documenter.jl but the 
> workflow is similar.
>
> Documenter.jl provides an easy way to combine docstrings and manually 
> written Markdown files. At the end of the day one gets mkdocs 
> documentations, which can be deployed to readthedocs, but you can also 
> produce a pdf using https://github.com/jgrassler/mkdocs-pandoc.
>
> Documenter.jl itself has nothing to do with LaTeX or not. No one prevents 
> you from using LaTeX in your dostrings or Markdown files.
>
>
> On Wednesday, May 11, 2016 at 5:20:36 PM UTC+2, Chris Rackauckas wrote:
>>
>> Forgot to mentioned that LaTeX is a requirement. I don't see any LaTeX in 
>> Documenter.jl
>>
>> On Wednesday, May 11, 2016 at 7:42:34 AM UTC-7, Kristoffer Carlsson wrote:
>>>
>>> https://github.com/MichaelHatherly/Documenter.jl with its documentation 
>>> http://michaelhatherly.github.io/Documenter.jl/latest/ is good imo.
>>>
>>> You can look at packages that are using Documenter here: 
>>> http://michaelhatherly.github.io/Documenter.jl/latest/man/examples/
>>>
>>> On Wednesday, May 11, 2016 at 4:04:58 PM UTC+2, Chris Rackauckas wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hi,
>>>>   I was wondering if there's any documentation/tutorials for generating 
>>>> documentation for Julia packages. I would like to make one of those Read 
>>>> the Docs things but I don't know where to start (or if that's still the 
>>>> preferred method) and a quick Google / Julia-users search didn't hit a 
>>>> result.
>>>>
>>>

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