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rated 0 times [  0] [ 0]  / answers: 1 / hits: 407  / 2 Years ago, sat, may 21, 2022, 10:39:49

There are many doc packages in the repositories which provide documentation in HTML.



Is there an easy way to find locally installed HTML documentation, like info or man?



I guess I should clarify this a little.



The question is not about opening an HTML file. There are plenty of browsers out there and they do it pretty well.
The question is about working with the whole farm of documentation files on my computer, HTML docs in particular.



Among /usr/share/doc/* there are man pages, info files, some plain text files and a bunch of HTML files.



To look up information in man pages we use man utility, or info -- it looks through man too. But the situation with HTML docs is like if you had man pages on your computer but no man utility!



So, since there are HTML docs, there also could be a tool to work with them (to search for the documentation you need etc <-- and would be nice to have fuzzy search for that). Does such a tool exist?


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 Answers
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The tools to browse local documentation are dhelp, dwww and some more (yelp in Gnome). You can find more of them in the wiki of the doc-base package.



doc-base registers documentation on the computer and all those programs are clients of this information.



Also, you can always navigate your broweser to: file:///usr/share/doc/ or any other directory and view html files from there. This way you avoid hassle with opening browser each time.


[#29235] Monday, May 23, 2022, 2 Years  [reply] [flag answer]
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