"Alexey Eremenko" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > 1) documentation available offline corresponding to the product. (eg > SUSE Linux 10.2 - and generic Linux - and Generic UNIX - all what is > relevant)
Relevant docs come with SUSE Linux. I something essential is missing, file an enhancement request as already said. If more is needed, set up a dedicated doc product or doc project with the help of the openSUSE build service. > *Of course, the programmer's docs doesn't need to be installed by default. [...] > In addition to skill levels ducumentation should be searchable (like > google) should be devided by topics - and - standards. - like ext3 > specification - or POSIX specs or RPM specs - whatever. Sounds like devel docs ;) > 5) I think it is a good idea to include third party docs to SUSE Linux > - if they are useful for SUSE users of course. Like "Maximum RPM" > open-sourced book by RedHat or TLDP docs. Devel doc! You must set up an Add-on Product on openSUSE. > SUSE does this already. (few books included, but hard to find - next > to impossible unless you know the RPM's name) IIRC, the yast package management knows about RPM catagories (RPM Groups); just use the view suitable for such a search ;) > 6) documentation must be fast. > > Here SUSE Linux lacks badly - the KDE docs indexing takes a lot of > time. (minutes or hours) a possible solution is to provide preindexed > database for most docs. That's a valid concern. There should be an option to start the indexing immediately after the installation - someone to file a feature request? -- Karl Eichwalder R&D / Documentation SUSE Linux Products GmbH Key fingerprint = B2A3 AF2F CFC8 40B1 67EA 475A 5903 A21B 06EB 882E --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
