> On Aug 23, 2018, at 6:37 AM, Geert Janssens <[email protected]> > wrote: > > Op donderdag 23 augustus 2018 15:08:54 CEST schreef Derek Atkins: >> Geert Janssens <[email protected]> writes: >> >> [snip] >> >>> So I'm open for alternatives that would equally handle version >>> control, but is easier for documentation writers to cope with. >>> >>> This can be a completely different tool that feels more intuitive or >>> it can be a system layered on top of git which would hide git's >>> technicalities. For example a web interface that offers online >>> documentation editing and that behind the scenes stores changes in >>> git. I don't know of such project off-hand though, but it may be worth >>> looking around for. >>> >>> Those who need more advanced access can clone the git repo and work >>> locally. >> I wonder how hard it would be to write a web interface on top of git >> that abstracts away most of the git work to enable easier access? >> >> -derek > > It looks like gitlab does something like this already... > > At least on Gnome's gitlab there are buttons to edit or open a webide. They > only work on pages you have write access of course. However you can always > fork a repo to get one with write access.
So does GitHub (it’s the pencil icon to the right of Raw/Blame/History), which also has a desktop front-end, https://desktop.github.com/ <https://desktop.github.com/> and a button on a file’s webpage that opens the file in Github Desktop. I haven’t tried any of them, but perhaps David T. might like to and give us a non-developer perspective. Regards, John Ralls _______________________________________________ gnucash-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel
