The startling absence of a Section 0 (zero) in the UNIX/GNU/Linux/unix/lugnuts/your_name_here "manpage" tradition leaves open the possibility for cLIeNUX seedocs to use zero as the index for the rest of the array of seedocs, as is normal for self-indexing data. cLIeNUX "see documents" are HTML hypertext, a form of self-indexing data. Section 0 then is for HTML indexes on a particular help namespace entry that may be meaningful in more than one traditional man or other category. stdin, mount and printf are just a few examples of topics that have or should have a Section 0 seedoc. In other words, the see command doesn't take a section-number argument, but rather checks for a Section 0 entry first, which will be an index to variants of the topic name if they exist. The actual file arrangement of seedocs is a single directory containing them all. This could be modified at some point such that all entry-point seedocs are in one dir, and others could be in subdirs.
As of this writing there are still numerous non-html (unconverted) manpages, sourcecode excerpts, HOWTOs and so on remaining in cLIeNUX seedocs. Those still unconverted are "seepages". see dys.info .
This author is astounded at the foresight the UNIX/GNU/Linux/unix/lugnuts/your_name_here community has demonstrated by leaving Section 0 free for it's proper use as seedoc indexes.
congratulations >> /dev/net &
"See?" Linus TorvaldsBUGS