Hi Joe,

The documentation looks very nice indeed. The layout and formatting are
light and easy to read. I like the "toc" version (table of contents on the
top). I think AsciiDoc can save us time in building the documentation. It
reminds me of LaTex or the markup used in some wiki's. Nice! I am
installing AsciiDoc on my system and will certainly use it.

73,

-- Edson PY2SDR




On Tue, Jan 21, 2014 at 2:57 PM, Joe Taylor <[email protected]> wrote:

> Follow-up to my previous message: I should have mentioned that Greg's
> AsciiDoc build script generates three different formats for the output html
> file.  All three are posted on the WSJT web site for you to look at:
>
> http://physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/K1JT/wsjtx-doc/wsjtx-main.html
> http://physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/K1JT/wsjtx-doc/wsjtx-main-toc.html
> http://physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/K1JT/wsjtx-doc/wsjtx-main-toc2.html
>
> I think they all look very nice.
>
> I have not used AsciiDoc before, but I am impressed.  It took less than
> ten minutes to install the necessary software on my Linux box (Xubuntu
> 12.10) and build the html files with Greg's script and input files. Here's
> what I did:
>
> $ sudo apt-get install mercurial
> $ sudo apt-get install asciidoc
> $ tar xzf wsjtx-doc.tgz
> $ cd wsjtx-doc
> $ build-doc.sh
>
> If you'd like to try this for yourself, I posted Greg's tarfile at
> http://physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/K1JT/wsjtx-doc.tgz
>
>         -- Joe, K1JT
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