I use Adobe Acrobat to scan HTML docs to a specified level of links, and
then Acrobat will put the resulting pages into a single PDF file, which
I can read online, or print out. I also often use the "bookmark" feature
in Acrobat to build a hyperlinked index that can be popped up on the
left of the doc on the screen. I have put most of the J doc into PDF for
my own use at one time or another.
Skip Cave
Markus Schmidt-Groettrup wrote:
Admitting that it is most useful to have some printed material,
my experience is that the ones I use most often are:
J Reference Card
http://www.jsoftware.com/jwiki/HenryRich?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=JRefCardv601_20060721.pdf
A Brief J Reference
http://www.jsoftware.com/books/pdf/brief.pdf
Perhaps the question should be asked:
what tool could be advised to integrate the HTML-Dokumentation into
one document?
My first idea would be to write a small J application,
that reads HTML-documents, merges the bodies into one, and modifies
the references appropriate, and read the merged documents with a text
processing program (Word).
Regards, Markus
Fuchs Ira schrieb:
I would very much like to be able to have a printed copy of the
Primer <http://www.jsoftware.com/help/primer/contents.htm> and the
User Manual <http://www.jsoftware.com/help/user/contents.htm>. I
would like to avoid printing each web page; has anyone created a PDF
of each of these documents?
Thanks.
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