PAGE DATE 19990323 20000217

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 Torvalds
 
BUGS
A phonetic interpretation of "seedocs" suffers from the tragic contradiction of implying "a male bovine neutered for draft use that has been reserved for breeding".
The gnu and the seedocs are believed to be closely related. This belief is based in part on the observed fact that they often harbor many of the exact same bugs.

RIGHTS

Copyright 1999 Richard Allen Hohensee
This file is released for redistribution only as part of an entire intact cLIeNUX Core.