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I work at a company that, for some reason, insists that all our development documentation should be in MS Word format. Which, being a binary format, means we cannot:

  • Diff versions of a document against each other (so peer reviewing them is a pain - because of the domain we work in, peer reviews for all changes are essential)
  • Grep a folder-full of documents for keywords

What do you use to write documentation in and why?

Please also give me ammo to change this situation with...

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MS word docx format is not a binary format, if you get them to move towards new word format you can diff and grep them more easily. – PintSizedCat Oct 8 '08 at 13:06

18 Answers

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Like Dylan's organisation, we also use the excellent Confluence wiki. I wrote an article about why this is better approach called Wiki is my word-processor, which should give you some reasons to change the situation.

Benefits of using a wiki for internal documentation include the following.

  • Word-processor users get sucked into changing the layout and typography, however good your templates are, which wastes time and reduces consistency.
  • A wiki provides full-text search, which you are unlikely to have for your body of the MS Word documents written by everyone.
  • A wiki provides a document version history; I have never heard of a team successfully keeping all revisions in Word documents and always being able to compare old versions, or using a version control system (with the possible exception of SharePoint but that's whole different failure scenario).
  • A wiki makes hyperlinks between documents easy; it is too hard to reliably link between documents in a collection of Word documents, so new documents end up duplicating older content into new monolithic documents which means they take more time to read and write.
  • Separate wiki pages can be edited by different people at the same time, and Confluence can merge changes when multiple people edit the same page at the same time; collaboration is harder with a Word document that only one person can edit at a time.
  • A wiki like Confluence automatically generates navigation pages based on wiki structure and tags; you need a librarian and lots of discipline to make it possible to browse a large collection of Word documents.
  • A wiki page usually loads and displays more quickly than a Word document.
  • A wiki page has more automatic meta-data; you need templates and discipline to make sure that Word documents always have Title, Author and Version set in the document properties and visible in the document on-screen and in print.

If you want more ammunition than this, then there is lots of wiki-promotion on The Atlassian Blog.

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Don't you store documentation files in some kind of Version Control System, ideally together with the source code? I would recommend to do this (makes it easy to get the documentation for old software releases).

And if you do store the docs in VCS, you will notice that plain text or XML-bases files are much better for this, because you can get diffs; also, changes between text files are usually stored more efficiently than changes between binary files.

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I think there are programmes that convert Word docs to plain text. Use one of them to convert the word doc to plain text and then use diff, grep etc

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It should be easy to automate word to extract all text from a word document into a text file. So you could write a script creating text files from word docs, and grep, compare, version control, Review these text files.

Of course this is not an ideal solution, since you loose your pretty formatting, but it should work.

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vote up 6 vote down

I recently started using DocBook XML to author my documentation.

On the upside, it's a pure text format. You can break a large document into multiple files, and use nodes to bring them all together into a single book. Table of contents and index are automatically generated. Intra-document links (within arbitrary text, pointing to chapters or sections) are very easy. And with a push of a button, I can create a single-html-file version, a chunked-html version (one file per chapter), and a PDF version.

After some tweaking and customization, I'm very happy with the output. The documents look great!!

DocBook is used extensively by real publishers (most notably, O'Reilly), and it's been around for more than fifteen years, so it's reached a certain level of maturity.

On the other hand, all of the processing is done with XSLT, using an ad-hoc collection of tools. (My own docbook pipeline includes Python, Java, Xerces, Xalan, Apache FOP, and PDF-SAM. Plus the official XSLT stylesheet distribution, and my own XSLT customizations.)

DocBook is not a turnkey solution. You won't be able to get going quickly, without reading the manual. And if you don't know anything about XSLT, you'll have to learn.

On the other hand, there are only a dozen or two XML tags that you really need to know to write the documents. (The real expertise comes into play during doc generation from the XML sources.) If one person on your team was willing to be responsible for writing the doc build script, then everyone else on the team could just learn the DTD and do a decent job contributing.

Anyhow... DocBook definitely has some faults. It's not the easiest system for tech authorship. But it's the best open source tool I know of.

The "Subversion Book" is written in DocBook. Here's a page with links to the different book versions (single-html, chunked-html, and PDF):

http://svnbook.red-bean.com/

And here's a link to the DocBook XML sources for the first chapter, so that you can get an idea for how it works:

http://svnbook.red-bean.com/trac/browser/trunk/src/en/book/ch01-fundamental-concepts.xml

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Awesome, thanks. – Johan Oct 8 '08 at 13:48
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A textual format facilitates merging your documentation with generated items such as JavaDoc, API references or data dictionaries. It also scales much better than word, which is hard to use for large documents. Finally, a format that allows includes allows multiple authors to work on a document concurrently.

LaTeX and FrameMaker (the two systems I have used for this) both have vastly superior indexing and cross-referencing capabilities and have either a native textual format or a textual version of their native format that can be included (MIF in the case of Framemaker). They are also both much more stable than word.

I've built tools that read data dictionaries and generate documentation that can be included into a larger document with stable indexing and two-way cross-referencing. The functional specification for This product was done with LaTeX in this way and got me another gig with the company. I have also developed a similar process with FrameMaker.

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Awesome, thanks a lot. – Johan Oct 8 '08 at 13:46
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For ammo, there's the trusty old Pragmatic Programmer, chapter 14: The Power of Plain Text.

As Pragmatic Programmers, our base material isn't wood or iron, it's knowledge. We gather requirements as knowledge, and then express that knowledge in our designs, implementations, tests, and documents. And we believe the best format for storing knowledge persistently is plain text. With plain text, we give ourselves the ability to manipulate knowledge, both manually and programmatically, using virtually every tool at our disposal.

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Thank you, that's great! – Johan Oct 8 '08 at 12:26
I have to disagree, since context makes the plain text all that more informative. For example, knowing what's a header, what's a paragraph, what's an equation, what's a table, etc. makes it far easier to parse and digest a document than in plain text. Plain text has no spec or schema to parse with – Soviut Jan 25 at 5:43
Plain text doesn't mean "no spec or schema." Markdown, HTML, JSON, CSV, and source code are all plain text. – Patrick McElhaney Jan 26 at 18:55
+1 for Pragmatic Programmer. Good luck on trying to convince your pointy-haired boss with a programmer's book, though... – Leonel Mar 3 at 21:41
The chapter has good arguments that should make sense to non-programmers. Photocopy it and stick it in an in-flight magazine. :-) – Patrick McElhaney Mar 3 at 22:18
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We use a wiki - specifically Confluence by Atlassian.

It's a commercial product, and it's great. One of the reasons we picked it over free/open wiki engines is that it has a full-blown WYSIWYG editor and various other features that make it more easily accessible to users who are familiar with Word.

We've also come up with a neat trick where we store images, designs, wireframes, etc. in Subversion, and then embed links in the wiki documents to those resources URLs via the Apache/SVN web interface module; notes on how we do this are here if you're interested.

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There are many tools for word document comparison. I currently use a python script that puts a command-line on the built-in compare and merge functionality of word.

http://nicolas.lehuen.com/index.php/post/2005/06/30/60-comparing-microsoft-word-documents-stored-in-a-subversion-repository

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If you use Beyond Compare as the diff tool for your source-control system (As we do, with Perforce), it will show you differences between revisions of your Word docs. Admittedly, it only shows the textual differences - formatting changes are not shown - but this is usually enough for you to see what changed.

This is just another reason to invest in Beyond Compare, as it is one of the most polished pieces of software I've ever used - and it's the best $30 dollars (Less if you buy several) I've spent on software

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vote up 1 vote down

Do they insist that you write it in Word or only that it's available in Word format? You could write in a text format and convert it to Word automatically.

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There's a template we have to use, but I guess it's still a possibility. Thanks, I'll consider it. – Johan Oct 8 '08 at 12:25
What would you do if you make it available in Word, and then a manager says, "Here's your doc I've edited with a bunch of changes." – Craig McQueen May 19 at 1:21
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You can at least compare Word documents, see the "Track changes" command in the "Extra" menu, or use software like DeltaView. Found via google search first link at lifehacker.com. Searching in word documents should be possible with Google Desktop Search or other similar programs that index all files they are able to read.

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MS Word supports document changes tracking and peer review.

The new MS Office format is fully XML based (to see this, rename a MS Word .docx file to a .zip, then unpack it to see).

Maybe Office 2007 may fit both your company requirements and your concerns ?

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That's a good point, thanks - I'll check it out. We've been using 2003 up to now. – Johan Oct 8 '08 at 12:24
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Not to defend MS products here, but MS word can diff documents.

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What's wrong with defending MS products? – Onorio Catenacci Oct 8 '08 at 12:08
Are you talking about the change tracking? It's true that it will show you the difference to the last version or two, but it quickly becomes cumbersome, so people tend to accept all changes before starting to work on the doc, so it's a pain to diff revision 2 against revision 6. – Johan Oct 8 '08 at 12:23
Actually, Word XP/2002 added actual document diffing. No idea how well it works, but it's on the menus somewhere. – Jonathan Oct 8 '08 at 12:32
Hmm... okay, I'll go fishing, thanks. – Johan Oct 8 '08 at 13:47
I think it first appeared with office 2003, but I am not 100% sure. – Sec Oct 11 '08 at 13:20
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Word has change tracking for documents (although it only works up until you accept the changes) and you can also grep them (the text isn't encrypted). So I'm not sure either of your arguments will hold up under scrutiny. I'd love to give you the ammo to change this but I've become jaded and cynical with age.

We use MS Word for our docs (which is a huge improvement over the earlier choice (Lotus WordPro - ugh!).

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Yes, Word's change tracking is the only way that we can do reviews. I didn't realize I'd be able to grep the files though... that'll get me out of my immediate predicament, thanks :-) – Johan Oct 8 '08 at 12:20
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Is the entire development team against this requirement, or is it a small group? If it's the entire team, just ignore the mandate and use a text-based format -- wouldn't be the first time employees ignored a silly rule. Works especially well if you've not made a big fuss about it in the past. If you have, management might look especially hard at your docs.

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Unfortunately some people don't care (anymore) - I guess they have just become cynical like Pax Diablo said. I understand we've had many crusaders over the years that have tried to change this, all have so far failed (no management support, I guess). – Johan Oct 8 '08 at 12:22
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You could ask for documentation to be in OOXML (.docx, in the case of Word) format. Not as ideal as using ODT, in my opinion, however, it's still just a zip file with a bunch of XML files inside. :-)

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just a little nitpick, it is a jar archive :). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/… – jeremy Oct 8 '08 at 11:59
just a nitpick on your nitpick: a JAR archive is a ZIP file. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JAR_(file_format) – Tim Farley Oct 8 '08 at 12:16
from the site you linked: "JAR files are based on the ZIP file format." (my emphasis). But yes, I suppose you got me. – jeremy Oct 8 '08 at 12:25
Seconded...but will grep know enough to peer inside a ZIP file that has a docx file extension? – Richard E Nov 27 '08 at 12:18
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We use a wiki (specifically the one provided by Trac) for the two reasons you mentioned. Plus, if we really need to we can get the text version of the markup and manipulate it in a text-only environment, too (e.g. as part of svn comments during commit).

A format that can be easily reduced to text-only (non-binary) is definitely a must. Having the ability to upconvert it to a pretty format like a PDF is, for us, not terribly important.

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Good idea, thanks - but I suspect we'll want to be able to upconvert to a pretty format, there's quite a few stakeholders that sometimes have to look at our docs. – Johan Oct 8 '08 at 12:33

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