diff options
author | P. J. McDermott <pjm@nac.net> | 2012-08-13 14:43:26 (EDT) |
---|---|---|
committer | P. J. McDermott <pjm@nac.net> | 2012-08-13 14:43:26 (EDT) |
commit | 477e047c6e89332bf5dfb49eb2ceedaf62f4b3dd (patch) | |
tree | 7332d67f0025ebbc8badcc57eef5c557ea84cadb | |
parent | 93a3719a5deff6297ce7be97939dba1d0155dde0 (diff) |
Remove notes on MultiMarkdown.
-rw-r--r-- | notes/markdown-vs-multimarkdown.txt | 23 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 23 deletions
diff --git a/notes/markdown-vs-multimarkdown.txt b/notes/markdown-vs-multimarkdown.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 1d71d57..0000000 --- a/notes/markdown-vs-multimarkdown.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,23 +0,0 @@ -Markdown: <http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/> -MultiMarkdown: <http://fletcherpenney.net/multimarkdown/> - -MultiMarkdown seems to provide much of what we currently need and may want in -the future: cross references, footnotes, tables, and PDF rendering (though this -can be done with Markdown as well using Pandoc). Why don't we just use that to -do all our work for us? - -The cross references (hyperlinks to sections) only work within a single -document. We want policy manuals to have a chapter/appendix per document (e.g. -HTML file). MultiMarkdown doesn't really support hyperlinks to sections in -other documents. So while MMD might be nice for its other features, it looks -like we should still handle in-book hyperlinks with our own pre-processing. - -Then why don't we just use normal hyperlinks to sections in different chapters? -This assumes we're outputting documents only in HTML. We would have source text -like this: - - See [Library Packages](binpkgs.html#librarypackages) for more information. - -Rendering a plain text file that refers to other plain text files with a ".html" -extension makes no sense. Additionally, this fails to work in the case of PDF -rendering. |