On Dec 21, 2005, at 2:57 AM, Burhan wrote:
For the impatient, you can disable CSS in your browser and get a nice
'print friendly' version.
There's also a nice print stylesheet.
Jacob
For the impatient, you can disable CSS in your browser and get a nice
'print friendly' version.
James Bennett wrote:
> On 12/20/05, Jacob Kaplan-Moss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I'm going to aim for a revision of the way the docs work, including
> > PDF versions, for around 1/1.
>
> Ever thought about going to something like DocBook for a downloadable
> version of the documentation? You c
On 12/20/05, Jacob Kaplan-Moss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm going to aim for a revision of the way the docs work, including
> PDF versions, for around 1/1.
Ever thought about going to something like DocBook for a downloadable
version of the documentation? You can parse that into pretty much a
On Dec 20, 2005, at 4:15 PM, Jeffrey E. Forcier wrote:
However, if I'm right in thinking the docs directory is up-to-date,
that's probably a bit nicer on their bandwidth :)
I probably shouldn't tell anyone... but our bandwidth is essentially
free, so wget away :)
I'm going to aim for a re
I am embarrassed to admit that I once did a monstrous 'wget' call
which downloaded the entire documentation section of
djangoproject.com and then converted the links and CSS includes to
local. It actually worked quite well.
However, if I'm right in thinking the docs directory is up-to-dat
On 12/20/05, braver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'd like to play with django offline, but the docs seem to be either
> online or plain text. Is there a downloadable version, e.g. an HTML
> tarball or a PDF?
The closest we have to that is the /docs/ directory in the
distribution, which, it seems
I'd like to play with django offline, but the docs seem to be either
online or plain text. Is there a downloadable version, e.g. an HTML
tarball or a PDF?
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