???????? Fri, 11 Jun 2010 00:35:27 +0300, Jay Woods <woodsjay at cox.net>:
> On Thursday, June 10, 2010 02:39:09 pm Anne Wilson wrote: >> On Thursday 10 June 2010 19:43:53 Mark Shelby wrote: >> > I've brought up this topic before, but was just browsing the kde >> > forums and so I'll ask it of this mailing list again: What is the >> > main reason that kde documentation cannot be formatted strictly >> > for wiki and updated by users, and available primarily via >> > internet access? > >> > Also what is the need to include and make available by default >> > offline documentation? Why can't the system admin (if one exists >> > for whatever size network) simply download a hard copy of the wiki >> > text and distribute it to users internally as the sysadmin and >> > users deem necessary? >> > >> >> You clearly live in a well-populated feature-rich environment. >> Believe it or not, there are still people who have only intermittent >> slow internet access or even none at all. Without distro-supplied >> documentation they would have none at all. >> > When I mash on the Help key there is only a message saying: > > There is no documentation available for /kontact/index.html. > > It is the same for KAddressBook, Kontact Administration, KOrganizer, > Kraft, and KTimeTracker. Oddly enough, KMyMoney is present. > > Where is this distro-supplied documentation you write of? Is it the > docbook out in > /usr/share/doc/kde/HTML/en/khelpcenter/userguide/groupware- > kontact.docbook? If so, how do I read it? Using Konqueror, it looks like > email from Marco Menardi gnu at kde.org. > > This behavior shows on Kubuntu 9.10, 10.04, and openSUSE 11.2. >> >> Anne Hi! The distribution you have mentioned pack the documentation in the separate packages (-docs or even -dev, which are not installed by default). Kraft does not have documentation at all. Please refer to the following page to see the list of KDE offline documentation http://techbase.kde.org/Projects/Documentation/KDE4_(health_table) Best regards, Yuri
