


comments: looks similar to kate, but has some nice tools for validation etc.ĭoesn't have the DocBook 4.3 XML DTD out of the box.WritingDocbookWithOpenOffice describes procedure to use OOo to edit DocBook The structuration of the docbook (sections) depends on the systematic use of the Heading 1, 2, 3, etc. comments: OOo3 Writer allows to save (File/Save as…) any document (ODF or html) as docbook (defaults to an "article", not a "book") and reopen it for editing.environment: (originally Java, but now ?).comments: looks promising, haven't thoroughly tested it yet.templates seem to be broken at the moment.What You See Is What You Mean (WYSIWYM) works beautifully.comments: installed by default with UbuntuĬomments: LaTeX oriented but can import / export DocBook.
#Editix free edition code
code folding / unfolding is handled very nicely.great option for kate, use it for all my editing.comments: installed by default with Kubuntu.comments: very lightweight, but still includes syntax highlighting, auto tag-closing for xml, and more.comments: if you love emacs, this is the thing.comments: bluefish is an HTML editor, not totally adept as an XML editor.Install: abiword abiword-common abiword-pluginsĬomments: I'm having problems importing DocBook, but it should work Packages in the "universe" repository are contributed by smaller groups or individuals and may not be as well-supported. Packages in the "main" repository should be well supported by the Ubuntu community. These programs are available from the Ubuntu package repositories. You can find many sample documents in the DocBook SourceForge CVS Repository which may be useful to exercise program features: Will the look and feel of the app be comfortable to me?.How much help am I going to need and will I be able to get it?.
#Editix free edition install

to distinguish which programs are included in Ubuntu.To be a comprehensive list of DocBook-aware editor programs jEdit + XML / XmlIndenter / XQuery / XSLT / JTidyPlugin.
