On Wed, 13 Dec 2000, Othmar Pasteka wrote: > > What's the "best" way of maintaining or creating a man page? > > I'll be needing to do that with some of my packages, but it just occurred to > > me I don't actually know how, apart from cutting and pasting in a text > > editor. My guess is there's a simple manpage editor out there, or a > > sensible emacs mode, so I wouldn't need to use anything so silly as a full > > SGML environment. > > well, there is a howto on writing a manpage which tells you the > basic things. and the manpage to man (the syntax) is a good > reference. imho it's not hard to use the direct nroff commands > for normal manpages. at least i didn't had any problems once i > know the commands and got used to it. >...
If you are are writing nroff I'd suggest using gmanedit: Package: gmanedit Priority: optional Section: editors Installed-Size: 348 Maintainer: Sergio Rua <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Architecture: i386 Version: 0.3.3-3 ... Filename: dists/woody/main/binary-i386/editors/gmanedit_0.3.3-3.deb Size: 66906 MD5sum: a793b959370c8a9ec683066a2a5194dd Description: GTK+/GNOME Man pages editor GNOME Manpages Editor is an editor for man pages that runs on X with GTK. . It's like most common HTML editors but more easy. You need to know manpages format. You can learn it from 'man(7)'. > so long > Othmar cu, Adrian -- A "No" uttered from deepest conviction is better and greater than a "Yes" merely uttered to please, or what is worse, to avoid trouble. -- Mahatma Ghandi