"Fred L. Drake, Jr."
Michael Hudson writes:
It occurs to me that I don't know *why* Fred is so much the documentation man; I've not had any trouble processing the docs into HTML lately (haven't tried on Windows, admittedly, and I haven't tried to make info ever).
It's certainly gotten easier to deal with the documentation on modern Linux distributions. At CNRI, we used mostly Solaris boxes, and I have to build my own teTeX installations from source, and hand-select a version of LaTeX2HTML that worked for me.
Oh, there was a reason I put a "lately" in what I said...
At this point, all the software that I can't just install from a RedHat CD is part of what gets pulled down from CVS. I've been able to build the docs on Cygwin as well, though I've not tried lately. A lot of what it takes to build the docs is written into Doc/Makefile, but it does require a solid make (it even uses $(shell ...) now, so maybe only GNU make will do; not sure).
One thing that puzzled me: Doc/Makefile seems to require that Doc/tools is on $PATH, unless I'm misunderstanding something.
What else needs to be done? There must be quite a bit of mucking about on creosote to do, I guess.
There's a bit, but that's getting easier and easier as I've gone through it a few times now. I updated PEP 101 the other evening so anyone can do what's needed to build the packages and get them in the download locations. There's more to be written to explain what else needs to be updated on the site.
Well, progress! I think it's a worthy goal that no single person is required to make a release, and that actually this isn't too far off. Cheers, mwh -- Never meddle in the affairs of NT. It is slow to boot and quick to crash. -- Stephen Harris -- http://home.xnet.com/~raven/Sysadmin/ASR.Quotes.html