On 12/9/05, Scot Jenkins <scotjenkins at gmail.com> wrote: > > Where I'm working, we're using a combination of DocBook [1] and > Subversion[2] (for version control). It's a bit of a complicated > initial setup but for a larger project with multiple folks > creating/editing documentation, I think it's the best route to go. We > use XMLmind[3] as an editor (Windows and UNIX versions available) to > create the DocBook source. XMLmind really makes creating the XML > source easy. The nice part about having a document as docbook source > is that you can generate whatever format you need (txt, html, pdf, > etc...) > > [1] http://www.docbook.org/ > [2] http://subversion.tigris.org/ > [3] http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/ I think docbook is a good option with a lot of flexibility and as you pointed out we can use it with our current subversion setup that we use to handle our code. Did you create your own software to handle publishing it on the web? I think I'll look into OpenOffice as a DocBook editor. There has been some progress on this plug-in<http://www.indesko.com/sites/en/downloads/ooo2dbk/view>[ indesk.com] that may make it a viable solution. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://shadowknight.real-time.com/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20051209/703b742b/attachment.htm