On 8 Jan 2002 at 22:03, Robert Collins wrote: > Given that info documentation can be converted to manpages, I see little > reason to maintain man pages separately.
Over the course of using cygwin in the past, `info' wouldn't always work for me. Maybe some flag or .rc file hadn't been set, whatever. It does work now. Just because something "can" (in abstract principle) be done, doesn't always mean *everyone* currently "can" or (more to the point) "knows how". That's the whole point of binary distros of any[open-source]thing, is it not? So that people can focus on what they are most interested in developing or using? To re-shift the discussion to another perspective, i suppose what interests me is to know how to know how current the manpages *as installed by a cygwin package* (as set up by "setup" in the cases where they are, which is frequent) are, relative to the version of the tool itself. And as I mentioned, there's the direct (albeit laborious) way, checking the manpages (and/or filestamps of their files) individually; might there be a more general policy we could be informed about, that would hold true most of the time, regarding how out-of-date the manpages might be? Someone reading this might know. Thanks, Soren Andersen -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Bug reporting: http://cygwin.com/bugs.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/