Thank you for all the answers, I will try more approaches then and the GT
sounds promising. But the GitBook looks especially nice. :)

Peter

On Tue, Oct 28, 2014 at 12:19 AM, kilon alios <kilon.al...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I personally use emacs , git , github and gitbook.io.
>
> There is a pillar preview for GT tools (as Sven mentioned), but I have not
> tested thoroughly . So maybe editing pillar inside Pharo is not that far
> away. Overall pillar syntax is very simple and quite small so it should not
> be that hard to implement for Pharo. Afterall Pillar is implemented in
> Pharo. But still Pharo cannot compete with emacs for editing text . Which
> is fine because nothing stops me from using both Pharo and Emacs and I love
> both tools very much.
>
> My dream would be not to use Pillar at all and Pharo instead have a
> documentation tool like LibreOffice that allow you to export to Pillar
> files. Why meta-tag or code when you can design ? ;)
>
> On Tue, Oct 28, 2014 at 12:38 AM, stepharo <steph...@free.fr> wrote:
>
>>
>> On 27/10/14 17:28, Peter Uhnák wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I wanted to experiment with Pillar however I'm not sure what to use to
>>> edit it. I was expecting some kind of editor with preview directly in Pharo
>>> but there is nothing. The next best thing I found was PillarHub based on
>>> Ace editor, however it depends on Mozilla Persona. Is such thing needed? If
>>> I'm running it locally why would I need to login somewhere? You don't log
>>> in to IDE when you want to program. Also such thing requires internet
>>> connection and is all extra nuisance when used on localhost. Is there a way
>>> to disable it?
>>>
>>> Do you use this setup, or are you all writing it in vim/emacs and only
>>> compile it once in a while?
>>>
>>
>> I write everything in emacs, mate, texshop and I compile from time to
>> time.
>>
>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Peter
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>

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