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I am using Win95 and I normally don't use Microsoft's Internet
Explorer at all. Until recently, I didn't even have a recent version
of it installed on my system.
When I first installed one of the POV 3.5 betas, it told me that my
system needed the installation of IE4 and HTML help, in order to view
the new POV help system. I hesitated installing IE4, but I eventually
made a backup copy of my C: drive, and I installed IE 4 and the HTML
help system as well. I'm very glad I made that backup...
Shortly thereafter, my system had a lot of stability problems. I
decided to restore my C: drive to its previous condidtion, using the
backup I had burned before the alleged "browser upgrade". My system
was stable once again.
Now we are up to version 6 of the POV 3.5 beta, and I'd really like to
look at the help files, but I really don't want to install IE4 again.
With all this in mind, I have a few questions:
Are the POV-Ray for Windows 3.5 help files currently available online?
If they currently are not, will they *ever* be available in a format
other than Microsoft's proprietary HTML-help format?
Thanks for listening,
Glen
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From: Mark Wagner
Subject: Re: Are POV-Ray for Windows 3.5 Beta "Help-Files" online somewhere?
Date: 12 Oct 2001 00:34:48
Message: <3bc672e8@news.povray.org>
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Glen Berry <7no### [at] ezwvcom> wrote in message
<=lTGO1Bw9NIoccEUMtE6tpw5Thq4@4ax.com>...
>Are the POV-Ray for Windows 3.5 help files currently available online?
They are available in HTML format online at www.povray.org/working-docs/
>If they currently are not, will they *ever* be available in a format
>other than Microsoft's proprietary HTML-help format?
Yes. The final version should have the HTML documentation available for
download for everyone who is using something other than Windows or MacOS.
It may also be available in other formats.
--
Mark
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On Fri, 12 Oct 2001 00:36:02 -0400, "Mark Wagner"
<mar### [at] gtenet> wrote:
>Yes. The final version should have the HTML documentation available for
>download for everyone who is using something other than Windows or MacOS.
>It may also be available in other formats.
That sounds like "generic" POV-Ray help, with little or no
windows-specific information. It would be nice if all the
Windows-specific features were covered in a format other than
Microsoft's html-help system. Perhaps that's expecting too much?
Later,
Glen
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On Fri, 12 Oct 2001 00:58:33 -0400, Glen Berry <7no### [at] ezwvcom>
wrote:
>That sounds like "generic" POV-Ray help, with little or no
>windows-specific information. It would be nice if all the
>Windows-specific features were covered in a format other than
>Microsoft's html-help system. Perhaps that's expecting too much?
Well, Microsoft made it that way. They dropped support for their old
.hlp format ages ago, and their HTML help format requires IE4.0 and
everything that comes with its installation. Chris Cason really had no
other choice.
Peter Popov ICQ : 15002700
Personal e-mail : pet### [at] vipbg
TAG e-mail : pet### [at] tagpovrayorg
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On Fri, 12 Oct 2001 10:47:31 +0300, Peter Popov <pet### [at] vipbg> wrote:
>On Fri, 12 Oct 2001 00:58:33 -0400, Glen Berry <7no### [at] ezwvcom>
>wrote:
>
>>That sounds like "generic" POV-Ray help, with little or no
>>windows-specific information. It would be nice if all the
>>Windows-specific features were covered in a format other than
>>Microsoft's html-help system. Perhaps that's expecting too much?
>
>Well, Microsoft made it that way. They dropped support for their old
>.hlp format ages ago, and their HTML help format requires IE4.0 and
>everything that comes with its installation. Chris Cason really had no
>other choice.
Chris had no other choice? Microsoft made it that way?
That's nonesense!
While Microsoft may be trying to migrate the windows help format to
HTML-help, that doesn't mean that there are no alternatives. Even with
HTML-help installed, the older style help files are still readable.
Chris could have stayed with the older help format, like many, if not
most commercial developers seem to be doing.
I've installed some big-name, recent, commercial programs that didn't
rely on the HTML help format. Apparently Microsoft didn't make those
developers use HTML help, and leave them with "no choice." If
companies like Borland, Lotus, and Symantec can get along without
HTML-help, then so could we.
Have you looked at an install disc for IE4? There are over 64 Megs of
*compressed* files on the disc! As we all know, much of this is
actually changes to the operating system, instead of being merely a
web browser installation. I aboslutely do NOT want to have to install
a 64 Meg operating system overhaul, and then actually install the
HTML-help system as an additional component, just to view ONE help
file for just ONE program on my system! Especially when the
installation of all this garbage makes my system unstable and prone to
frequent crashes!
For what it's worth, I would prefer help files written in plain HTML,
over the Microsoft "enhanced" html-help system. An Adobe Acrobat
document would also be better than Microsoft's html-help. In fact, a
word processor document would have been better. At least I don't
actually have to install Word for Windows, in order to open one of its
documents. Last but not least, I would rather have one, large, plain,
ascii, tezt file - instead of html help.
You can't honestly say that Chris has no choice in this matter. He has
several choices. It's the end users of POV-Ray for Windows version
3.5, that will have no choice. They will have no choice, but to find a
way to live with Chris' choice of Microsoft's html-help.
Later,
Glen
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From: Christoph Hormann
Subject: Re: Are POV-Ray for Windows 3.5 Beta "Help-Files" online somewhere?
Date: 12 Oct 2001 13:18:35
Message: <3BC725EB.FEA1AB7B@gmx.de>
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Glen Berry wrote:
>
> Chris had no other choice? Microsoft made it that way?
>
> That's nonesense!
>
> [...]
>
> Have you looked at an install disc for IE4? There are over 64 Megs of
> *compressed* files on the disc!
I understand that, in fact i was probably the most strict advocate of this
opinion during pre-beta, but i also understand why HTML help is chosen for
the standard WinPov docs. All the other suggestions you made do not have
the possibility of context sensitive help and most of them do not provide
an index.
> You can't honestly say that Chris has no choice in this matter. He has
> several choices. It's the end users of POV-Ray for Windows version
> 3.5, that will have no choice. They will have no choice, but to find a
> way to live with Chris' choice of Microsoft's html-help.
That's not true, there will most surely be other formats once the final
version is released. I understand that the situation is not nice now
during beta since you can't correctly view the docs without a newer IE.
I'm not able to install IE4+ on my old machine at all since my Windows
partition currently is too small so i know what this means.
Christoph
--
Christoph Hormann <chr### [at] gmxde>
IsoWood include, radiosity tutorial, TransSkin and other
things on: http://www.schunter.etc.tu-bs.de/~chris/
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From: Warp
Subject: Re: Are POV-Ray for Windows 3.5 Beta "Help-Files" online somewhere?
Date: 12 Oct 2001 13:45:08
Message: <3bc72c24@news.povray.org>
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Glen Berry <7no### [at] ezwvcom> wrote:
: Especially when the
: installation of all this garbage makes my system unstable and prone to
: frequent crashes!
It's funny that you first hear lots of stories about unstability, but when
you try yourself, you don't see any.
Why everyone else seems to have an unstable IE but I don't?
: For what it's worth, I would prefer help files written in plain HTML,
: over the Microsoft "enhanced" html-help system.
Why? They take more space and are more difficult to navigate. Of course
a HTML version is good as an alternative, but not as the only solution.
: An Adobe Acrobat
: document would also be better than Microsoft's html-help.
How so? PDF is more difficult to navigate and you have a lot less options
to configure how it looks. And does it support URLs?
: In fact, a word processor document would have been better.
This is even worse than a PDF. You just *can't* navigate a document.
: Last but not least, I would rather have one, large, plain,
: ascii, tezt file - instead of html help.
*puke*
--
#macro N(D,I)#if(I<6)cylinder{M()#local D[I]=div(D[I],104);M().5,2pigment{
rgb M()}}N(D,(D[I]>99?I:I+1))#end#end#macro M()<mod(D[I],13)-6,mod(div(D[I
],13),8)-3,10>#end blob{N(array[6]{11117333955,
7382340,3358,3900569407,970,4254934330},0)}// - Warp -
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From: Thorsten Froehlich
Subject: Re: Are POV-Ray for Windows 3.5 Beta "Help-Files" online somewhere?
Date: 12 Oct 2001 13:58:57
Message: <3bc72f61@news.povray.org>
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In article <FxjHO3LiiUznSx=cB1yQjal21Fty@4ax.com> , Glen Berry
<7no### [at] ezwvcom> wrote:
> If
> companies like Borland, Lotus, and Symantec can get along without
> HTML-help, then so could we.
Sure, that is why for their products you (or others) pay to use their
products. These companies have a _commercial_ interest and a few hundred
well-paid developers to fix and workaround each and every problem they have
with the old help system!
How much do you pay for POV-Ray? How many developers does the POV-Team pay
to develop POV-Ray?
There are many solutions for you:
* Wait for the final version of POV-Ray 3.5.
As has been stated clearly before, only during the development of POV-Ray we
will NOT provide alternative formats as those take time to generate that we
rather spend on fixing bugs.
* Use another operating system.
For the current beta you can only use Mac OS, but sooner or later a Linux
version will be available. Both obviously won't have Microsoft HTML Help.
* Don' use POV-Ray 3.5.
Nobody is forcing you to use the current beta. Use POV-Ray 3.1g if you like
it more.
* Don't use POV-Ray
Again, nobody is forcing you to use POV-Ray. If you want a different help
system, you may try a different program. I don't know, but maybe 3D Studio
Max, Cinema 4D or Maya have a help in a format you like more. As you seem
to dislike HTML help so much is probably won't be a problem for you to pay
for what makes you happy ;-)
Thorsten
____________________________________________________
Thorsten Froehlich
e-mail: mac### [at] povrayorg
I am a member of the POV-Ray Team.
Visit POV-Ray on the web: http://mac.povray.org
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On Fri, 12 Oct 2001 12:54:58 -0400, Glen Berry <7no### [at] ezwvcom>
wrote:
>Chris had no other choice? Microsoft made it that way?
>
>That's nonesense!
That nonsense has been agreed upon in private discussions between the
Team, TAG and IIRC the pre-beta testers before even the beta was out
(maybe even at the alpha stage). There are no up-to-date development
tools or converters for the old help format, and there are a lot of
bugs in it, and the last patch was released years ago (1996 I think).
Of course one can't please everyone, and that counts for software
developers even more, but the people involved in POV-Ray development
are trying to please as many as possible. Would you rather make
*everyone*, including the Team, cope with MicroSoft's archaic & buggy
software, than hold your horses for just a while?
As of generic HTML, can you point two browsers that render a page the
same way? Me, I can't... and I used to pass for a web designer.
One thing is sure, when 3.5 is out of beta, the docs will be available
in other formats. So, once again, please hold your horses.
Peter Popov ICQ : 15002700
Personal e-mail : pet### [at] vipbg
TAG e-mail : pet### [at] tagpovrayorg
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On 12 Oct 2001 13:45:08 -0400, Warp <war### [at] tagpovrayorg> wrote:
> It's funny that you first hear lots of stories about unstability, but when
>you try yourself, you don't see any.
Well, I DID try it myself, and I suffered from system instability.
>: For what it's worth, I would prefer help files written in plain HTML,
>: over the Microsoft "enhanced" html-help system.
>
> Why? They take more space and are more difficult to navigate. Of course
>a HTML version is good as an alternative, but not as the only solution.
Why? Because I can actually access those files on my system, without
adding a huge amount of buggy Microsoft software, that makes my system
unstable. Of course, plain html is more bulky and the navigation is a
bit more awkward, but it *DOES* work on my system.
>: An Adobe Acrobat
>: document would also be better than Microsoft's html-help.
>
> How so? PDF is more difficult to navigate and you have a lot less options
>to configure how it looks. And does it support URLs?
Once again, I would pick this format over html-help, because it at
least runs smoothly on my system, doesn't require a 64 Meg OS and
browser upgrade, and it doesn't cause any instability on my system. I
think it does support URL's, but I'm not really sure about that.
>: In fact, a word processor document would have been better.
>
> This is even worse than a PDF. You just *can't* navigate a document.
True, it is worse than PDF in some ways, but it is still better than a
format that my system can't access, without the problems that come
with html-help.
As for not being able to "navigate a document", and I assume you mean
a word processor document in particular, you happen to be wrong. I can
actually search for keywords easier in a word processor document, than
I can with a dedicated help file system. Isn't searching considered
navigation? I can also turn to any page in the word processor document
I choose. Isn't that navigation?
>: Last but not least, I would rather have one, large, plain,
>: ascii, tezt file - instead of html help.
>
> *puke*
What's the matter? Choking on your html-help?
Remember, there are GOOD REASONS that the US Justice Department, as
well as legal officials in other countries, not to mention millions of
computer users worldwide are upset with Microsoft. One of them happens
to be Microsoft's bundling of the OS with its browser. One can't even
install a new Microsoft browser without also drastically rearranging
the underlying OS.
What's worse, the POV-Team has seen to it that I can't run the latest
version of POV-Ray without also installing a certain buggy, high
security risk, grossly bloated, 64 Meg (when still compressed),
"web-browser" package.
All I want to do is some 3D rendering, and be able to view some
documentation for the rendering software. I shouldn't need the IE4
albatross to do that.
Later,
Glen
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