Txt2tags was included into Rudix, a collection of
ready-to-use Unix/Linux software for the Mac. Each software is packaged
with the default Mac installer, so you just have to press the "Continue"
button a few times and it's done. No need to install a subsystem like
Fink or DarwinPorts.
You have that really big HTML page that takes forever to load on the
browser? What about to break it in smaller pieces, one topic per page?
The HTMLDOC tool can make it for you.
The main purpose of this tool is to do the opposite: join multiple HTML
files …
The txt2tags Team continues to grow. New
contributors have spent their spare time helping to improve the program
documentation. A big WELCOME to the newcomers!
Per Erik Strandberg translated the Sample file to Swedish.
wfifi translated the program messages (potfile) to Chinese.
Nicolas Dumoulin revised the User Guide's French translation …
Summary: New commented block mark and several bug fixes.
This release introduces a new mark for commented blocks: %%%. The syntax
is similar to the Verbatim and Raw blocks, using the same mark to open
and close the block. Kudos to Leo Rosa for sending the patch!
After more than a year of silence, there is a new txt2tags version out!
It's a minor release, mostly related to the Style option (--style or
%!style). Now you can specify two or more CSS files for an HTML/XHTML
page, or modules for LaTeX. Example:
The problem with the old site (besides its ugliness) was that the menu
only appeared in the main page. You follow any link, the menu vanishes.
Don't blame …
At July 26, 2001 the txt2tags version 0.1 was released.
It had six targets (txt, html, sgml, pm6, mgp, moin), command line was
the only interface (with just one option -t), a few supported structures
and marks, no translations, poor documentation, a dozen users, 461
lines of code.