Sunday 09 November 2008 20:32:58 Georg Brandl
> Hans Fangohr schrieb:
> > Dear all,
> >
> >> Alaric Haag schrieb:
> >>> Hello,
> >>>
> >>> The Sphinx page bills it as a tool for documenting Python projects. I
> >>> perceive it to be more of a "document management tool" that uses
> >>> ReST.
> >>> I've barely scratched the surface of using it though.
> >>>
> >>> So, I'm considering using it to make a "lab manual" to document all
> >>> sorts of things we do, mostly NOT related to Python. I like the idea
> >>> that one "document" can serve both as an on-line resource, and as a
> >>> printed "book".
> >>>
> >>> What, if anything, "ties" Sphinx to documenting Python projects, or
> >>> does
> >>> it just _facilitate_ that?
> >>
> >> As Sebastian said, Python is its origin and focus, but there's nothing
> >> that prevents you from not documenting something Python.
> >> q§
> >
> > Just to add my bit: I am considering to use Sphinx for setting up a
> > web-page that is not documenting a software project or code, but
> > rather represents some more generic kind of webpage (for example for a
> > research group). I have played with rest2www before (and use this for
> > http://www.soton.ac.uk/~fangohr for example), and am currently trying to
> > understand what I can and can't do with sphinx for these kind of
> > applications. (All I need are static webpages, so I didn't go down the
> > Django route yet). If people can recommend any other tools that are
> > similar to rest2www and 'sphinx for generic webpages', I'd be interested
> > about that.
>
> I know of one "generic" personal webpage that's made with Sphinx:
> http://lunaryorn.de/
FWIW, the Sphinx 0.5 sources of the site are available online at 
http://git.lunaryorn.de/?p=lunarsite;a=summary

Hih

-- 
Freedom is always the freedom of dissenters.
                                      (Rosa Luxemburg)

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