On Sun, Oct 18, 2015 at 07:35:01AM -0700, Thomas Beale wrote:
> 
> I have no affinity with Ruby or Python, and have no problem getting the 
> Ruby environment working, including doing a little bit of hacking with 
> Pygments to implement my own lexer for colourising a new language (and 
> Pygments BTW is in Python, so all this is via a Pygments-rb project that 
> bridges Pygments to Ruby). 
> 
> I had never seen a line of Ruby before this, nor any clue about running the 
> Ruby CLI. But it wasn't hard. I did all this under cygwin on Windows, which 
> is probably the least preferable, and a bit annoying to set up. But now it 
> works just like any Linux or MacOSX environment.
> 
> Just go with the flow - I have interacted withe Asciidoctor development 
> team, and they are excellent. The language of implementation is the last 
> concern on my mind.
> 
> W.r.t. Asciidoc and Asciidoctor, I strongly suggest you want to be on the 
> Asciidoctor path, if you are serious about publishing. See my blog post on 
> this 
> <http://wolandscat.net/2015/09/11/goodbye-to-adobe-framemaker-hello-asciidoctor/>

Very interesting piece of article, thanks!

To the list: is there a "Who use asciidoc(tor)" page somewhere?
Since I discover new users everyday...

--


Marco Ciampa

I know a joke about UDP, but you might not get it.

+------------------------+
| GNU/Linux User  #78271 |
| FSFE fellow       #364 |
+------------------------+

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