you already have apache and dig in your distro this could very easily
make it searchable. As far as the distro being to big apache is not so
big and you get searchable help files.
Guillaume Cottenceau wrote:
>
> Graham Percival <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > On Fri, May 26, 2000 at 01:06:25AM -0400, Hoyt wrote:
> > > BTW, there should be a better way to access the docs and READMEs that are
>installed during the installation. They are everywhere and hard to find unless you
>are good at grepping - and then you need to know almost specifically what you are
>looking for.
> >
> > Aren't they all in /usr/doc? It's a pain to search for what you want in there
> > (if you forget about tab completion :), but they're all in one place. I
> > noticed a "Help -> HOWTOs" in one of the menus, which should make things
> > easier.
>
> Yes, in the menu there's Help/Howto's, which brings up Netscape with the
> html-Howto's.
>
> However, that's true that it is sometimes hard for newbies to discover the
> place for documentation for packages ; and also, once you know it, it's
> not easy to browse in it if you don't like the command line tools. Most
> users are not extreme-geeks :-).
>
> I would add, to be more general, that some packages are bringing man
> pages, some others info pages, some others only a text-faq, some others,
> html documentation, etc.
>
> It is true that it would be better to be easily informed, say, given a
> package name, what sort of help/information system is available.
>
> Anyone thinking this may be a good idea / anyone having an idea how we
> could realize that ?
>
> --
> Guillaume Cottenceau