I could see where a custom font would be a problem if the job was not meant for
print or PDF.
However, one could use HTML font-includes for web-based help or embed the font
in an ePub.
Of course, that brings up other potential problems: such as having a reasonably
up-to-date browser or ePub
Spirit Airlines, headquartered in Miramar Florida (near Fort Lauderdale), is
looking for Technical Writers. These are full time positions with benefits.
Thanks in advance for anything you can do to help in identifying someone who
may be interested in filling these positions. As a footnote, I
MIF is the Framemaker text format. RCS or any other revision control system
can be used to store revision histories of Framemaker documents stored in
MIF. I wouldn't expect it to be very efficient in terms of space.
Companies I have worked with have routinely controlled FM documents in RCS
using
I don't think you quite understand.
I'm documenting a complex plugin for Eclipse. I will only know which buttons I
need in the text as I'm writing. To pull out the button icons from the entire
product and convert them would be a huge job.
What Frame needs is a way of defining frame 'tags'.
What was the advantage of doing that over using the .fm binaries? Or
was it just that the system didn't support binaries?
I've spent a lot of time poking around in MIF files troubleshooting
problems, and I can't quite imagine doing a merge. It doesn't seem
like a practical format for that kind of
Have you actually done that? I tried a few years ago and the theory
did not work in practice.
On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 12:35 PM, David Creamer
ideasli...@ideastraining.com wrote:
I could see where a custom font would be a problem if the job was not meant
for print or PDF.
However, one could
Requirement for document accessibility is that a document has a language
specified as a property. Typically it is done at the document level (from File
PropertiesAdvanced) or changed in a tag property
(right-clickPropertiesLanguage) if a specific tag language is different from
the rest of the
I could see where a custom font would be a problem if the job was not meant for
print or PDF.
However, one could use HTML font-includes for web-based help or embed the font
in an ePub.
Of course, that brings up other potential problems: such as having a reasonably
up-to-date browser or ePub
ttp://lists.frameusers.com/pipermail/framers/attachments/20130913/bdc23c28/attachment.html>
MIF is the Framemaker text format. RCS or any other revision control system
can be used to store revision histories of Framemaker documents stored in
MIF. I wouldn't expect it to be very efficient in terms of space.
Companies I have worked with have routinely controlled FM documents in RCS
using
I don't think you quite understand.
I'm documenting a complex plugin for Eclipse. I will only know which buttons I
need in the text as I'm writing. To pull out the button icons from the entire
product and convert them would be a huge job.
What Frame needs is a way of defining frame 'tags'.
What was the advantage of doing that over using the .fm binaries? Or
was it just that the system didn't support binaries?
I've spent a lot of time poking around in MIF files troubleshooting
problems, and I can't quite imagine doing a merge. It doesn't seem
like a practical format for that kind of
Have you actually done that? I tried a few years ago and the theory
did not work in practice.
On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 12:35 PM, David Creamer
wrote:
> I could see where a custom font would be a problem if the job was not meant
> for print or PDF.
> However, one could use HTML font-includes for
obat, Adobe FrameMaker
Certified Technical Trainer (CompTIA)
cell: 301.524.3165 www.jetsetcom.net | www.trainingonsite.com
-- next part --
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL:
<http://lists.frameusers.com/pipermail/framers/attachments/20130913/b2e86239/attachment.html>
14 matches
Mail list logo