[Nautilus-list] Re: Help API for GNOME 2.0
- From: Dan Mueth <d-mueth uchicago edu>
- To: Malcolm Tredinnick <malcolm commsecure com au>
- Cc: GNOME Doc List <gnome-doc-list gnome org>, <gnome-2-0-list gnome org>, Nautilus List <nautilus-list eazel com>
- Subject: [Nautilus-list] Re: Help API for GNOME 2.0
- Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2001 21:10:15 -0500 (CDT)
On Thu, 12 Jul 2001, Malcolm Tredinnick wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 11, 2001 at 06:50:39PM +0100, Sander Vesik wrote:
> > On Tue, 10 Jul 2001, Dan Mueth wrote:
> > > gnome_help_display(path, name, linkid)
> > > path = path in $PREFIX/share/gnome/help (as GNOME 1.x)
> > > name = doc file name, without extension (it will search
> > > for .xml, then for .sgml)
> > > linkid = this is the id attribute inside the doc to link
> > > to
> > >
> > > gnome_help_display_html(path, name)
> > > path = path in $PREFIX/share/gnome/help (as GNOME 1.x)
> > > name = HTML file name, with extension and target
> > >
> >
> > The problems I see with this is that it forces all applications using the
> > gnome help API to install the help files in the same location, something
> > which you may be not able to do with you don't say have root access on the
> > machine.
>
> Agreed. We've just crawled out of this hole with requiring things like
> pixmaps to be installed in a single hard-coded directory. Let's not get
> back into it via another route.
Right. We have to make sure that the packages are relocatable too.
> > How about:
> > gnome_help_display(key, path, name, linkid)
> > and
> > gnome_help_display_html(key, path, name)
> >
> > Where key is a string:
> > a) NULL in which case it behaves as described before
> > b) used as a key to look up the "virtual root" of help files using
> > gconf key /help/virtual_roots/$key allowing apoplications to
> > register their own help file locations
>
> This seems like the correct approach to me. The path should definitely
> be a gconf thing.
Sounds good.
> > > Are we content with requiring browsers to read XML/SGML? The main concern
> > > I have heard about this requirement is that Nautilus on Solaris has
> > > serious problems. So, I think the people who need to answer this is
> > > probably whoever is hacking on Nautilus for Solaris. (Who is that?) I
> > > surely hope Nautilus on Solaris is working great by GNOME 2.0. What do
> > > the Solaris Nautilus hackers think?
> > >
> >
> > Well, yes, I also hope nautilus is going to be usable on Solaris (and
> > other non-Linux operating systems). gnome-2.0 with major functionality
> > regressions as seen from the point of view of an end user (no
> > nautilus) just doesn't make any sense.
>
> Umm .. I no longer have a machine with 32M of RAM to test this on (I'm
> going to buy a cheap third-hand machine next week with limited memory to
> play with for these purposes), but when I tried Nautilus on such a box
> about three months ago it was unusable! I don't know if the recent round
> of speed improvements have also improved the memory requirements down to
> almost nothing, but it is completely unacceptable for Gnome not to
> function on such machines. Sure, you have to turn all the bells and
> whistles off, but you shouldn't have to turn the help files off.
>
> To my mind, _requiring_ Nautilus on such a machine would be shipping
> with reduced functionality, since it rules out Gnome as an alternative.
After chatting on #sun a bit this morning... It sounds like all GNOME
programs which use the component system are abysmally slow on Solaris.
Apparantly Evolution even slower than Nautilus. Since I see no
fundamental reason why GNOME programs or the component system must be
slower on Solaris than on Linux, I expect that it is just a matter of work
to fix it. And since GNOME isn't really GNOME without any of the apps
which use the component system, I'm betting this problem will be fixed ;)
So, I'm going to start assuming that Nautilus will work alright on Solaris
as our help browser and forget about the need for an HTML-only help
browser unless people start making a lot of noise.
> So this brings up another question (which may already be know): how do I
> tell my Gnome installation what help browser to call.
The control center allows you to set the "ghelp:" handler (ie. help
browser) in the URL handler section.
> > > If we decide that we want to allow HTML-only browsers, then we have a
> > > handful of options but they all have their drawbacks. To name a few:
> > >
> > > 1) Move gnome-db2html3 out of Nautilus and into the core GNOME
> > > libraries. This would allow other help browsers, even if
> > > they are HTML-only, to display the documents.
> > >
> >
> > It is more of a decision along the lines of 'do we want alternative help
> > browsers'. If yes, then we should do this.
>
> I vote "yes".
This seems like the right way to go. Of course there is no need to do
this until somebody actually decides to create an alternative help
browser.
> What is wrong with this?
> 4) An HTML help browser can exist transparently if it does the
> following: converts XML helps files to HTML either on-demand or
> en masse (a cron job to keep up to date, perhaps). Then it sees
> every request for a help file and maps that to the appropriate
> HTML file. How it does this is up to the help browser.
>
> In this way, you can have Netscape/Mozilla/Galeon/FooBrowser/whatever as
> your help browser, even, but there needs to be a wrapper app that is
> what is called when help is required and it then makes the appropriate
> call to Mozilla, etc as appropriate. In fact, one wrapper app fits all
> here, since it's just a matter of changing which web browser it calls in
> the final phase.
This sounds like #1, since you have to pull the code that converts XML to
HTML out of Nautilus and put it into gnome-libs.
> > Well, it would allow things like
/me anxiously waits to hear what sort of things it allows
Dan
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