Paul,
I've used oXygenXML before and if you can afford it, it will accelerate
your content development. However, if you need a cheap (free) editor with "OK"
XML support, use Eclipse which has XML support and a spell checker.
Regards,
Dean Nelson
In a message dated 8/12/2012 4:09:50 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
paul_t100@fastmail.fm writes:
On
12/08/2012 23:41, Richard Hamilton wrote: > Paul, > > There
are a bunch of very good visual editors out there that will handle DocBook.
The one I know best is Oxygen (http://www.oxygenxml.com/), which works very
well with DocBook. > > Best Regards, > Dick Hamilton >
------- > XML Press > XML for Technical Communicators >
http://xmlpress.net > hamilton@xmlpress.net Goodness, this product is
well
overpriced
http://www.oxygenxml.com/buy.html?utm_expid=4313807-0&utm_referrer=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.oxygenxml.com%2Fxml_developer.html
Paul > > >
On Aug 12, 2012, at 3:05 PM, Paul Taylor wrote: > >> In a
previous project I used docbook 4 to create help text for an application which
I then used it to generate html and Javahelp. The generation worked very well
but I found it very difficult writing the help text embedded within the
docbook tags, it wasn't until the final output was generated that I could see
my typos and generally bad english. >> >> So considering
using docbook v5 for a new project but is there a WYSIWYG editor/plugin
available, i.e create help text in word/open office type program but am able
to save it in docbook format ? >> >>
Paul >> >>
--------------------------------------------------------------------- >>
To unsubscribe, e-mail:
docbook-apps-unsubscribe@lists.oasis-open.org >> For additional
commands, e-mail:
docbook-apps-help@lists.oasis-open.org >> >
--------------------------------------------------------------------- To
unsubscribe, e-mail: docbook-apps-unsubscribe@lists.oasis-open.org For
additional commands, e-mail:
docbook-apps-help@lists.oasis-open.org
|