Nuno Lopes wrote:
It allows a 'normal' user to see a manual in html, pdf, ..., but it
builds all that off-line. In the display area, I think livedocs is better.
In the edit mode, it allows an editor to edit a file in text, xml, html
or Latex mode. This can be good if a translator doesn't know ho
Hi,
I've taken a look to DocBookWiki and I think it doesn't worth to invest
our time on it.
I've installed it and I've used both in user and superuser mode, but it
didn't convinced me
It allows a 'normal' user to see a manual in html, pdf, ..., but it
builds all that off-line. In the display
Hi,
I found this via the Drupal Docs mailing list:
http://doc-book.sourceforge.net/homepage/
It might be worth looking into for easy docbook editing.
Goba
Hi,
I've taken a look to DocBookWiki and I think it doesn't worth to invest our
time on it.
I've installed it and I've used both in
That would be a good idea to set up. It would save a lot of trouble
getting things like CygWin set up at least.
Not really sure about:
DocBookWiki uses xsltproc (in Linux), so the only supported platform is
Linux.
Xsltproc obviously works on windows. Maybe the author have not looked
into making
That would be a good idea to set up. It would save a lot of trouble
getting things like CygWin set up at least.
Not really sure about:
DocBookWiki uses xsltproc (in Linux), so the only supported platform is
Linux.
Friedhelm
Gabor Hojtsy wrote:
That would be a good idea to set up. It would save a lot of trouble
getting things like CygWin set up at least.
Not really sure about:
DocBookWiki uses xsltproc (in Linux), so the only supported platform
is Linux.
Xsltproc obviously works on windows. Maybe the author have n
That would be a good idea to set up. It would save a lot of trouble
getting things like CygWin set up at least.
--
Regards,
David Mytton
http://www.olate.co.uk
Hi,
I found this via the Drupal Docs mailing list:
http://doc-book.sourceforge.net/homepage/
It might be worth looking into for easy docbook editing.
Goba