diff --git a/xml/help_admin.xml b/xml/help_admin.xml index 42694e769a..5451e10f19 100644 --- a/xml/help_admin.xml +++ b/xml/help_admin.xml @@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ - &productnamereg; comes with various sources of information and documentation, + &productnamereg; comes with several sources of information and documentation, many of which are already integrated into your installed system. @@ -22,10 +22,9 @@ Documentation in /usr/share/doc - This traditional help directory holds documentation files and - release notes for your system. It contains also information of installed - packages in the subdirectory packages. Find more - detailed information in . + This traditional help directory holds documentation of installed packages + in the subdirectory packages. Find more detailed + information in . @@ -57,7 +56,7 @@ When installing new software with &yast;, the software documentation is - usually installed automatically and appears in the help center of your + normally installed automatically and appears in the help center of your desktop. However, certain applications, such as GIMP, may have different online help packages that can be installed separately with &yast; and do not integrate into the help centers. @@ -69,10 +68,9 @@ Documentation directory - The traditional directory to find documentation on your - installed Linux system is /usr/share/doc. The - directory contains information about the packages installed on your system, - plus release notes, manuals and more. + The traditional directory to find documentation on your installed Linux + system is /usr/share/doc and contains information about + the packages installed on your system. @@ -80,40 +78,13 @@ In the Linux world, many manuals and other kinds of documentation are available in the form of packages, like software. How much and which - information you find in /usr/share/docs also depends + information you find in /usr/share/doc also depends on the (documentation) packages installed. If you cannot find the subdirectories mentioned here, check if the respective packages are installed on your system and add them with &yast;, if needed. - - &suse; manuals - - We provide HTML and PDF versions of our books in different - languages. In the manual subdirectory, find HTML - versions of most of the &suse; manuals available for your product. For an - overview of all documentation available for your product refer to the - preface of the manuals. - - - If more than one language is installed, - /usr/share/doc/manual may contain different language - versions of the manuals. The HTML versions of the &suse; manuals are also - available in the help center of both desktops. For information on where to - find the PDF and HTML versions of the books on your installation media, - refer to the &productname; Release Notes. They are available on your - installed system under /usr/share/doc/release-notes/ - or online at your product-specific Web page at . - - - - Package documentation @@ -314,7 +285,7 @@ - Special files (usually found in /dev) + Special files (normally found in /dev) @@ -363,7 +334,7 @@ - System administration commands (usually only for &rootuser;) + System administration commands (normally only for &rootuser;) @@ -396,8 +367,8 @@ Info pages are another important source of information on your system. - Usually, they are more detailed than man pages. They consist of more than - command line options and contain sometimes whole tutorials or reference + They are more detailed than man pages. They consist of more than + command-line options and contain sometimes whole tutorials or reference documentation. To view the info page for a certain command, enter info followed by the name of the command, for example, info ls. You can browse an info page with a viewer @@ -405,8 +376,8 @@ nodes. Use to move forward and to move backward. Within a node, you can also browse with and - but only and will - take you also to the previous or subsequent node. Press Q + but only and + takes you also to the previous or subsequent node. Press Q to end the viewing mode. Not every command comes with an info page and vice versa. @@ -429,6 +400,15 @@ + + Release notes + + + For release notes, see . + + + &suse; technical support @@ -473,12 +453,12 @@ The Linux Documentation Project (TLDP) is run by a team of volunteers who write Linux-related documentation (see - ). It is probably the most - comprehensive documentation resource for Linux. The set of documents - contains tutorials for beginners, but is mainly focused on experienced - users and professional system administrators. TLDP publishes HOWTOs, - FAQs, and guides (handbooks) under a free license. Parts of the - documentation from TLDP are also available on &productname;. + ). It is a comprehensive + documentation resource for Linux. The set of documents contains tutorials + for beginners, but is mainly focused on experienced users and professional + system administrators. TLDP publishes HOWTOs, FAQs and guides (handbooks) + under a free license. Parts of the documentation from TLDP are also + available on &productname;.