Seems most people use LaTex in one way or another. I discovered asciidoc a while ago and found that it creates nice documentation, too. It is kind of a markup language on top of docbook-xml, and creates nice pdf through dblatex, or online documentation in xhtml. If a customer would ask for a Word document, I could theoretically use the roundtrip docbook templates and feed him one just out of the existing asciidoc markup. With the filter function in asciidoc I can have inline data processed by an external program to create a graphic to be placed instead of the inline data. I am just at the beginning of exploring this tool and its possibilities, but it has been around for a while and is used and developed actively.
This tool can also generate .man files as a little hint to geda documenters :-) It is just an apt-get install asciidoc away. -- Svenn _______________________________________________ geda-user mailing list [email protected] http://www.seul.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geda-user

