On Sun, Aug 24, 2014 at 12:41:19AM +0100, Michael Treibton wrote: > If you don't watch this decision it will look like the same thing as > docbook did - that it is here for no reason.
The requirements for what we want are still the same thing as what Docbook brought us: * The ability to render man pages; * The ability to have the documentation in multiple files; * The ability to render in different formats I know Asciidoc can do this. I know that markdown can do this. I know you can come back and tell me any number of the plethora of typesetting/abstraction programs can do these things. That's nice. But heed my previous email; when you get down to it, *roff (mdoc) *is* the abstraction layer. That mdoc allows for all these things, and is still letting you use the very typesetting language man pages render with, etc., is a winner in my eyes. So far all you've done is peddle rhetoric. I take your point on board about due consideration, and I like to think I've done that and justified it. If anyone else can prove that we've got this wrong, or that fundamentally, what mdoc provides cannot address a certain part of the documentation, then I really do want to hear about that. But I am not going to sit here and justify ever single point in as much detail as I have done thus far; it's distracting me from my ABNF work---you *do* want a documented parser at some point, right? Now, if you'll excuse me... -- Thomas Adam -- "Deep in my heart I wish I was wrong. But deep in my heart I know I am not." -- Morrissey ("Girl Least Likely To" -- off of Viva Hate.)