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- Subject: tlug: (La)TeX, SGML, or ... ?
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <turnbull@example.com>
- Date: Sat, 26 Dec 1998 01:47:19 +0900 (JST)
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>>>>> "jb" == Jonathan Byrne <jq@example.com> writes: jb> I need to pick a Linux/Unix-based tool to develop a site jb> procedures manual. My criteria are that it should be easily jb> editable (mostly by me, but at some point by other members of jb> the engineering department as well), that it should be jb> viewable and editable graphically, and if the format is one "Editable graphically." Arg. Min. I mean, sai-tei. Kudaranai. Oh well, there goes the neighborhood, even Jonathan's succumbed. jb> for which a (good) convert-to-HTML tool exists, that's a plus. jb> The choices appear to be Tex or LaTeX, SGML, or create jb> Postscript files. Forget Postscript, the only people in their right minds who compose large documents directly in Postscript are all computers. Hand- written Postscript is going to be either Ugly or unmaintainable. There's no point in TeX, go directly to LaTeX. I would say XML (a derivative of SGML) is probably the markup language of choice. However, AFAIK there are no WYSIWYG editors for XML or any variant of SGML except HTML. All SGML variants submit docilely to [X]Emacs + psgml.el in my experience, which gives you menu-driven editing but not graphical WYSIWYG. Linux docs have historically been written in linuxdoc-SGML, which is a pretty good recommendation I should think. Debian has its own variant, debiandoc-sgml, but this uses a non-standard (ie, non James Clark) SGML engine AFAIK. jb> Has anyone used LyX to make LaTeX files? Do you think this jb> would meet my needs fairly well? It should. There are two main potential hitches I can see. (1) You don't like any of the formats supplied with LyX. I don't think it is easily extensible by non-TeX hackers. Either LaTeX or an SGML variant would be more easily extensible, I think. (2) LaTeX2HTML (the main tool for converting LaTeX to online docs) may not like machine-generated LaTeX very much. You may not like LaTeX2HTML's output (I despise it); I don't think it is very easily customizable. jb> Also, I may eventually want to put screenshots into the jb> manual, but these will probably not be present in the first jb> version (s). I don't know if LyX permits this, all of the other options do. -- University of Tsukuba Tennodai 1-1-1 Tsukuba 305-8573 JAPAN Institute of Policy and Planning Sciences Tel/fax: +81 (298) 53-5091 __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ What are those two straight lines for? "Free software rules." ------------------------------------------------------------------- Next Nomikai: 14 January 1999, 19:30 Tengu TokyoEkiMae 03-3275-3691 *** it will will be Jan 14 (Thu), as Jan 15 (Fri) is a natl holiday Next Technical Meeting: 13 February, 12:30 Place: TBD ------------------------------------------------------------------- more info: http://tlug.linux.or.jp Sponsor: PHT
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