[release-notes] Move some images around
- From: Michael Catanzaro <mcatanzaro src gnome org>
- To: commits-list gnome org
- Cc:
- Subject: [release-notes] Move some images around
- Date: Thu, 3 Sep 2020 22:07:50 +0000 (UTC)
commit ebdfdacf80e3365d768798c0e81a1534ae88de8b
Author: Michael Catanzaro <mcatanzaro gnome org>
Date: Thu Sep 3 16:31:40 2020 -0500
Move some images around
Let's have only two images of GNOME Tour, and move one of them to the
developer page where we explain what GNOME OS is
help/C/developers.page | 4 ++--
.../{welcome-tour1.png => welcome-to-gnome-os.png} | Bin
help/C/figures/{welcome-tour2.png => welcome-tour.png} | Bin
help/C/figures/welcome-tour3.png | Bin 87500 -> 0 bytes
help/C/index.page | 5 +----
5 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/help/C/developers.page b/help/C/developers.page
index 3ec38604..b0290db9 100644
--- a/help/C/developers.page
+++ b/help/C/developers.page
@@ -28,14 +28,13 @@
<section>
<title>Boxes</title>
- <media its:translate="no" type="image" src="figures/boxes-xml.png">GNOME Boxes XML editor</media>
<p>Boxes is GNOME’s application for managing virtual machines and remote
desktop connections. When creating a new virtual machine, Boxes
now allows users to manually select the operating system if it fails to do
so automatically, rather than falling back to the default “Unknown” virtual
machine profile. This improves support for operating systems that are
incompatible with the default profile.</p>
-
+ <media type="image" src="figures/boxes-xml.png">GNOME Boxes XML editor</media>
<p>Boxes now allows editing a virtual machine’s libvirt XML, to allow
changing advanced settings that are not available in the user interface.</p>
</section>
@@ -47,6 +46,7 @@
distributions. Due to recent changes in Boxes’s support for UEFI, you must
use Boxes 3.38 to run GNOME OS images. Older versions of Boxes will not
work. XXX need a link.</p>
+ <media type="image" src="figures/welcome-to-gnome-os.png">GNOME OS Welcome</media>
</section>
<section>
diff --git a/help/C/figures/welcome-tour1.png b/help/C/figures/welcome-to-gnome-os.png
similarity index 100%
rename from help/C/figures/welcome-tour1.png
rename to help/C/figures/welcome-to-gnome-os.png
diff --git a/help/C/figures/welcome-tour2.png b/help/C/figures/welcome-tour.png
similarity index 100%
rename from help/C/figures/welcome-tour2.png
rename to help/C/figures/welcome-tour.png
diff --git a/help/C/index.page b/help/C/index.page
index c69f6795..3a339fd6 100644
--- a/help/C/index.page
+++ b/help/C/index.page
@@ -50,10 +50,7 @@
run, after the initial setup. The tour is primarily there to provide onboarding
for new users, but it also serves to give a nice welcome to users in their first
session.</p>
- <media type="image" src="figures/welcome-tour1.png">Welcome tour, page 1</media>
- <media type="image" src="figures/welcome-tour2.png">Welcome tour, page 2</media>
- <media type="image" src="figures/welcome-tour3.png">Welcome tour, final page</media>
- <p>XXX pick one screenshot ?</p>
+ <media type="image" src="figures/welcome-tour.png">Welcome tour</media>
<p>The Welcome tour is an example of a GNOME application that is written in Rust.</p>
</section>
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