I have a company manual that I'm trying to keep under version control and I could use some advice. The manual needs to go to different departments, and while certain areas of the manual are the same no matter what department it goes to, some sections are different for Accounting, HR, IT, etc.
Is it possible using branching to have a manual whereby I can have the manual in a /trunk, and then create branches for each individual department -- or something similar? I don't want to have a different word document for each department as much of the manual is the same.
So my goal is that if I find a typo in a section that's the same for all departments, then I'd like to be able to correct it once globally as opposed to have to make the change in five different word documents.
But I'm also concerned about how to work with the specific sections of the manual that are different. If there's an area where there are examples that are department-specific, how do I make it so that I can have one version (branch?) with Accounting Dept.-specific examples and another version (branch?) that has IT Dept.-specific examples?
And if branching/merging is the way to go, is mercurial a better option than SVN? I'm new to version control and I have used SVN sparingly and I'm generally happy, but the one time I needed to merge was not a pleasant experience. I've read that people seem happier with mercurial vs. svn for merging and while I don't want this question to be about SVN vs Mercurial, is it easier to branch/merge with Mercurial vs. SVN in my specific situation?