Date: Tue, 28 Mar 0 23:14:49 +0300 From: "Andrey Zakhvatov" <andy@mps.cgu.chel.su> To: nik@freebsd.org Cc: freebsd-doc@freebsd.org Subject: Re: doc/ tree tagging Message-ID: <AAvAHuuCw6@mps.cgu.chel.su> References: <20000328015222.A6172@kilt.nothing-going-on.org>
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Hello, > > What about: > > 1) Create subtree exclusively for man pages (partially already > > there - share/man), a-la doc/ tree (i.e. with different languages > > in mind). > > > > 2) Move all man pages from utilities sources to this directory and > > track them here. > > > > I think it can help to simplify tracking man pages for translation teams. > > Just to be sure I understand this correctly. . . > > Do you mean moving things like src/bin/cat.1 to src/share/man/man1/cat.1, > or, more likely, src/share/en_US.ISO_8859-1/man/man1/cat.1 ? Yes, but I agree with you, it's practically impossible. > Or are you just talking about creating new directories under doc/<lang> ? I'll create some for Russian man pages when I'll start to translate them, but what branch I must tracking? STABLE or CURRENT, or both (like official English pages)? > If it's the former, I very strongly doubt you'll get a change of that > magnitude past everyone else. I can see the benefits from a translators > point of view, but I don't think everyone else will think it is worth the > upheavel. I could be wrong. Yes, maybe it's harder for coders to change *.{c|h} files in one directory and man pages in another, but who knows? If we have strong agreement, that DocProj is little different from SrcProj ;) and man pages belong to DocProj, then it's good way for creating language-specific manpages-${LANG} parts of distribution. But.. I guess not this time, so little translators, so many docs.. ;) > If you mean the latter, we already do something like that with the Japanese > manual pages. Yeah, I'll take that like a pattern for future work. Sincerely yours, Andy. To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-doc" in the body of the message
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