On Mon, Jan 13, 2014 at 6:54 AM, Jean Weber <jeanwe...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Sun, Jan 12, 2014 at 10:31 PM, Marc Paré <m...@marcpare.com> wrote: >> Le 2014-01-11 08:05, Christian Lohmaier a écrit : >>> >>> Hi Pedro, *, >>> >>> Am 11.01.2014 12:50 schrieb "Pedro" <pedl...@gmail.com >>> <mailto:pedl...@gmail.com>>: >>> > >>> > [abbreviations or the term Online Help] ... >>> So let's hear some suggestions. I assume everyone will understand which >>> one is meant when they read the term "Offline Help" in isolation. If you >>> disagree, please also suggest a different term for that. >>> >>> Ciao >>> Christian >>> >> >> I have been following this discussion and the only worry I have is that the >> doc team is not included on it. IMO, Jean should be aware of this discussion >> as the acronyms and any potential changes may have an effect on the various >> documentation terminology that is being used in our docs. >> >> It would be nice if any changes were coordinated with all affected groups. >> >> From my point of view OLH (Online Help), and, from a vernacular point of >> view for most users, would mean that once you choose that particular >> link/menu item, that you would be sent "online" on the internet for the help >> files. The OLH menu link, when viewed in context in any particular software >> package, usually means to a user that she/he will be taken to help files for >> that particular software available on the internet. >> >> IMO, if we would want to make it clearer that the help files are NOT online, >> then another name/acronym should be created to properly describe the menu >> choice. Making as short, descriptive, obvious and as literal as possible, >> IMO, should be our primary goal; this will ensure that all competency levels >> of users (whether newbies or knowledgeable users) are clear as to the menu >> choice they are making. Perhaps just labelling "Help Documents" would be >> sufficient enough. The fact that there is no "online" will be obvious enough >> that the user is not being sent online for help docs and that the local >> files are always accessible to the user. > > > I've been following this thread, as it relates to a (minor) concern > that I've had for some time. (My computer use goes back far enough > that to me, "online" means "on the computer" (not "on the Internet) > versus in a book; but I'm well aware that the term means something > different these days, especially to younger users. So, yes, we need a > better one; and yes, the term needs to be the same in the user guides > as it is in the program and elsewhere. > > I haven't done any research to see what might be a common term these > days, so I don't immediately have a suggestion. I'll get back to you > later today when I've had a chance to consider this a bit more. > > --Jean
The user guides refer to "the built-in Help system" which is reached by pressing F1 or choosing Help > LibreOffice Help on the menu bar. "Built-in" may not be the best term but it is short, descriptive, and literal. Is it obvious? Your call. (I still haven't done any research to see what might be a common term these days.) --Jean _______________________________________________ List Name: Libreoffice-qa mailing list Mail address: Libreoffice-qa@lists.freedesktop.org Change settings: http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/libreoffice-qa Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/libreoffice-qa/