On Thu, 1 Aug 2002, Eric S. Raymond wrote: > Ka-Ping Yee <python-dev@zesty.ca>: > > I am not against structured text processing systems in general. > > I think that something of this flavour would be a great solution > > for PEPs and docstrings, and that David has done an impressive > > job on RST. It's just that RST is much too big (for me). > > And if we're going to pay the transition costs to move to a > heavyweight markup, it ought to be DocBook, same direction GNOME and > KDE and the Linux kernel and FreeBSD and PHP are going. I would be very unhappy about having to enter and edit inline documentation in an XML-based markup language. RST is not what i would call heavyweight *markup*. It's just a heavy specification. There are too many cases to know. If you simplified RST in the following ways, we might have something i would consider reasonably-sized: - Choose one way to do headings. - Choose one way to do numbered and non-numbered lists. - Choose one way to do tables. - Drop bibliographic fields. - Drop RCS keyword processing. - Get rid of option lists (we already have definition lists). - Drop some fancy reference features (e.g. auto-numbered and auto-symbol footnotes, indirect references, substitutions). - Drop inline hyperlink references (we already have inline URLs). - Drop inline internal targets (we already have explicit targets). - Drop interpreted text (we already have inline literals). - Drop citations (we already have footnotes). - (Or, in summary -- instead of ten kinds of inline markup, we only need four: emphasis, literals, footnotes, and URLs.) - Simplify inline markup rules (way too many characters to know). Instead of 100 lines describing markup rules, two lines are sufficient: emphasis starts from " *" and stops at "*", literals go from " `" to "`", and footnotes go from " [" to "[". -- ?!ng "This code is better than any code that doesn't work has any right to be." -- Roger Gregory, on Xanadu
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