Re: Authoring Tools WAS: Switching to XML
От | Josh Berkus |
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Тема | Re: Authoring Tools WAS: Switching to XML |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 200612110954.52969.josh@agliodbs.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Switching to XML (Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net>) |
Ответы |
Re: Authoring Tools WAS: Switching to XML
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Список | pgsql-docs |
Folks, Tom and Peter correctly point out that discussion of production tools and authoring tools are separate, and only come together if there are tools for XML which solve both issues, an assertion which is not yet proven. I am one of the champions of XML simply because I know for a fact that there are no real authoring tools* for SGML. However, I do *not* know that the tools for XML produce acceptable output. So, questions to answer: 1) Are there enhanced tools for Docbook XML, WYSWYG or otherwise, which make doc authoring easier and produce correct output for PostgreSQL Docs? 1) a) is there some way we can try various tools and check output? 2) If (1), would switching to XML make doc writing with Emacs/VIM harder? 3) If (1), will having authoring tools available increase the number of doc contributors? Regarding (3), I believe that having authoring tools would increase our pool based on two things: a) Anectodal evidence, including several people (like me) who were prevented from doing significant doc clean-up by the amount of labor required to restructure large SGML documents. b) That the vast majority of the OSS world is no longer using SGML, meaning that even for hand-editing people who work on other projects will be more familiar with XML and thus better able to edit it. While these two may not be enough to answer "should we migrate", they are enough to make it worth trying to find the answer to (1), since if all of the Docbook XML authoring tools are crappy the whole discussion is moot. So, can someone help me come up with a way to validate a Docbook XML version of the PostgreSQL docs so that I (and others, hopefully) can start testing tools? * = an authoring tool is one which makes generation of the document easier/faster than hand-editing text files. No such tool exists for SGML -- even the Emacs toolkit merely does validation. -- Josh Berkus PostgreSQL @ Sun San Francisco
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