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Re: [Gnu3dkit-dev] White Paper and API reference


From: Philippe C . D . Robert
Subject: Re: [Gnu3dkit-dev] White Paper and API reference
Date: Sat, 12 Oct 2002 10:32:50 +0200

On Freitag, Oktober 11, 2002, at 11:46  Uhr, Brent Gulanowski wrote:
On Friday, October 11, 2002, at 05:18  PM, Matt Brandt wrote:

While having "generated" documentation is nice in theory, I've never seen a generator that didn't require significant reformatting of the output to get something I would want to read. I'll be happy to check out a few of these though, and see if one of them is adequate for our purposes. The point really is to end up with accurate and usable documentation, not to produce non-functional art, so it is probably worth investigating.

It's good because it means all of the changes get made in one place, and so it's more likely that the docs are in line with the code. I'm all for it, even if it seems a pain at first, once we're used to it, we'll be glad for it. It will certainly increase the usefulness of 3DKit. HeaderDoc, like JavaDoc, produces HTML -- you can use HTML formatting of your own, too. It's pretty sensible, since the output is immediately ready for the web.

Exactly my point!...:-)

As for TexShop, I downloaded it and tried it out. I wasn't familiar with Tex before. Wow, real geekware. I used to use troff back in the dim times but I didn't think anyone still used this kind of thing :-) I don't mind exerting the effort (and a few bucks to get a book) to learn how to use it effectively, but I think we may be limiting ourselves in terms of quickly bringing anyone new into the documentation project in the future if we use this kind of tool.

Even the term "TeX" is too geeky for me. And I'm pretty geeky sometimes. I think we're feeling the GNU purism vs. vox populi strain a bit 8^). Anyway, TeX seems to be great for doing mathematical formulae, but what else does it have to offer? Layout is nice for book design, but we just want something readable and navigable, and HTML should suffice.

Hehe ... or Mac vs. Unix culture ...:-) Anyway, my point here is that we should use sth which follows the following rules:

- everyone is able to contribute
- it is easy to use
- it allows the 'conversion' to TeX, PDF, HTML or XML via a filter/converter

Did I forget something ?

I therefore suggest

- for API documentation we use autodoc, autogsdoc or HeaderDoc
- for the white paper and documentation guides we use either XML or plain text.

What do you think?

Speaking of wysiwyg HTML and free software, is there such a beast that combines those two features?

I dunno, I am not a HTML guy...:-)

-Phil
--
Philippe C.D. Robert
http://www.nice.ch/~phip





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