Tzahi Fadida wrote on 2003-03-28: > what you suggest takes out all the point of using the cvs. for that, i don't need > cvs. i could just > save them on a joint share, and similar things like that. > What i am seeking is using the power of cvs, to use, for example wincvs to update > parts of the > document > that i feel should be in it, just like when it is used to version C projects. > example: a colleague commits a requirement to the document in the cvs and when i > come to the commit > phase, i see it and choose to accept or reject the change. > > i am willing to move from office word for a small and free software (not another > office behemoth), > if it will allow me to do this thing. i don't mind working with html with simple > headings, all i am > concerned about is the numberings topology for easy readability. > for ex: > 1. something > 1.1 something else > 1.2 etc... > Consider some tool like docutils_ that takes unobtrusive almost-text markup (reStructuredText_) and converts into nice outputs [1]_.
. _docutils http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ . _reStructuredText: . [1] Note that docutils is still work in progress; however it's already very usable for 95%-99% of one's need (YYMV). There are also other tools/format competing for this niche, e.g. AsciiDoc, etc. -- Beni Cherniavsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, whose 12x CD burner works at 24x with cdrecord in linux - sheer magic! [Really, I timed it, ~3m:30s+ ~30s fixation for a full 700MB disk, that's definitly not the 12x I paid for :-). Long live linux!] ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]