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readme.xml


"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd"[

xmlns:xi CDATA #FIXED "http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
href CDATA #IMPLIED
parse (xml|text) "xml"
xpointer CDATA #IMPLIED
encoding CDATA #IMPLIED
accept CDATA #IMPLIED
accept-language CDATA #IMPLIED >


xmlns:xi CDATA #FIXED "http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" >


]>




Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this
software and associated documentation files (the Software), to deal in the
Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify,
merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit
persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
copies or substantial portions of the Software.


Except as contained in this notice, the names of individuals credited with
contribution to this software shall not be used in advertising or otherwise to promote
the sale, use or other dealings in this Software without prior written authorization
from the individuals in question.


Any stylesheet derived from this Software that is publicly distributed will be
identified with a different name and the version strings in any derived Software will
be changed so that no possibility of confusion between the derived package and this
Software will exist.




THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL DAVID CRAMER, KASUN GAJASINGHE, OR ANY
OTHER CONTRIBUTOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

This package is maintained by Kasun Gajasinghe,
kasunbg AT gmail DOT com and David Cramer,
david AT thingbag DOT net and with
contributions by Arun Bharadwaj and Visitha Baddegama. Please
direct support questions to the url="http://wiki.docbook.org/DocBookDiscussion">DocBook-apps
mailing list.
This package also includes the following software written and copyrighted by others:

Files in template/common/jquery are
copyrighted by JQuery under the MIT License.
The file jquery.cookie.js Copyright (c) 2006 Klaus Hartl under
the MIT license.

jquery



Some files in the >template/search and class="directory">indexer directories were
originally part of N. Quaine's htmlsearch DITA plugin.
The htmlsearch DITA plugin is available from the url="http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/dita-users/files/Demos/"
>files page of the DITA-users yahoogroup. The
htmlsearch plugin was released under a BSD-style
license. See indexer/license.txt
for details.
htmlsearch


DITA
htmlsearch plugin



Stemmers from the url="http://snowball.tartarus.org/texts/stemmersoverview.html">Snowball
project released under a BSD license.


Code from the Apache Lucene search
engine provides support for tokenizing Chinese, Japanese, and Korean content released
under the Apache 2.0 license.


Code that provides weighted search results and some
other improvements was graciously donated by url="http://www.oxygenxml.com">SyncRO Soft
Ltd., the publishers of the oXygen XML
Editor.


>TagSoup, released under the Apache 2.0
license, makes it possible to index html instead of just
xhtml output.


Cosmetic improvements provided by url="http://docs.openstack.org"
>OpenStack.

Webhelp for DocBook was first developed as a url="http://code.google.com/soc/">Google Summer of Code project.


2008-2012
Kasun Gajasinghe
David Cramer


David
Cramer
david AT thingbag DOT net


Kasun
Gajasinghe
kasunbg AT gmail DOT com

January 2012





Overview of the package.



A common requirement for technical publications groups is to produce a Web-based help
format that includes a table of contents pane, a search feature, and an index similar to what
you get from the Microsoft HTML Help (.chm) format or Eclipse help. If the content is help for
a Web application that is not exposed to the Internet or requires that the user be logged in,
then it is impossible to use services like Google to add search.
features




Sophisticated CSS-based page layout


Client-side search.
search
features



Provides full content search of the documentation. Shows the search results with
links to chunked pages, and a small description.


Search results scoring/rating - The results are weighted according to how many
times the words in search query appears in it, is it bold or not, is in index terms
etc. The score out of 5 is shown by small colored boxes after each
search-result.


Search results can include brief descriptions of the target. class="singular">
search
description



Stemming support for English, French, and German. Stemming support can be added
for other languages by implementing a stemmer.
search
stemming



Support for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean languages using code from the Lucene search
engine.


Search highlighting shows where the searched term appears in the results.

search
highlighting





Table of contents (TOC) pane with collapsible toc tree.


Auto-synchronization of content pane and TOC.


Nicely placed small forward, backward, top links


TOC and search pane implemented without the use of a frameset.


An Ant script and sample Makefile to generate output.
You can use the ant build file by importing it into your
own or use it as a model for integrating this output
format into your own build system. Alternatively, you can
use the build scripts as a template for creating your own
script. You can also generate webhelp from DocBook using
the url="http://docbkx-tools.sourceforge.net/docbkx-samples/manual.html"
>Docbkx Maven plugin.





The following sections describe how to
install and use the package on Windows with the sample Ant build
script. In an environment where unix shell command are
available, you can also use the
Makefile.sample as a starting point for
creating your build script. To use
Makefile.sample you must have
xsltproc and java
available in your PATH.



Installation instructions






The examples in this procedure assume a Windows
installation, but the process is the same in other
environments, mutatis
mutandis. In an environment where unix
shell command are available, you can also use the
Makefile.sample as a starting point
for creating your build script. To use
Makefile.sample you must have
xsltproc and java
available in your PATH. You can also use
the url="http://docbkx-tools.sourceforge.net/docbkx-samples/manual.html"
>Docbkx Maven plugin to generate webhelp.


If necessary, install Java
1.6 or higher.


Confirm that Java is installed and in your PATH by typing the
following at a command prompt: java -version

To build the indexer, you must have the JDK.





If necessary, install Apache
Ant 1.8.0 or higher. See url="http://ant.apache.org/manual/install.html">Ant installation instructions.


Unzip the Ant binary distribution to a convenient location on your system. For
example: c:\Program Files.


Set the environment variable ANT_HOME to the top-level Ant
directory. For example: c:\Program Files\apache-ant-1.8.0.
See How To Manage
Environment Variables in Windows XP for information on setting
environment variables.



Add the Ant bin directory to your PATH. For
example: c:\Program Files\apache-ant-1.8.0\bin


Confirm that Ant is installed by typing the following at a command prompt:
ant -version

If you see a message about the file tools.jar being
missing, you can safely ignore it.





Download Saxon
6.5.x and unzip the distribution to a convenient location on your file system.
You will use the path to saxon.jar in linkend="edit-build-properties"/> below.
The build.xml has only been tested with Saxon 6.5, though
it could be adapted to work with other XSLT processors. However, when you generate
output, the Saxon jar must not be in your
CLASSPATH.



Download url="https://xerces.apache.org/xerces2-j/">Xerces2
Java and extract it to a convenient location on
your file system. You will need the
xercesImpl.jar and
xml-apis.jar from this distribution
in in .


In a text editor, edit the
build.properties file in the
webhelp directory and make the changes indicated by the comments.
You must set appropriate values for
xslt-processor-classpath,
xercesImpl.jar, and
xml-apis.jar.
See the DocBook url="../../../doc/html/webhelp.html">reference
documentation for detailed information about the
available webhelp and other parameters. Note that not all
DocBook parameters are passed in to the xsls by the
build.xml by default. You may need
to modify the build.xml to pass in
some DocBook
parameters.
# The path (relative to the build.xml file) to your input document.
# To use your own input document, create a build.xml file of your own
# and import this build.xml.
input-xml=docsrc/readme.xml

# The directory in which to put the output files.
# This directory is created if it does not exist.
output-dir=docs

# If you are using a customization layer that imports webhelp.xsl, use
# this property to point to it.
stylesheet-path=${ant.file.dir}/xsl/webhelp.xsl

# If your document has image directories that need to be copied
# to the output directory, you can list patterns here.
# See the Ant documentation for fileset for documentation
# on patterns.
#input-images-dirs=images/**,figures/**,graphics/**

# By default, the ant script assumes your images are stored
# in the same directory as the input-xml. If you store your
# image directories in another directory, specify it here.
# and uncomment this line.
#input-images-basedir=/path/to/image/location

# Modify the follosing so that they point to your local
# copy of the jars indicated:
# * Saxon 6.5 jar
# * Xerces 2: xercesImpl.jar
# * xml-commons: xml-apis.jar
xslt-processor-classpath=/usr/share/java/saxon-6.5.5.jar
xercesImpl.jar=/usr/share/java/xercesImpl.jar
xml-apis.jar=/usr/share/java/xml-apis.jar

# For non-ns version only, this validates the document
# against a dtd.
validate-against-dtd=true

# The extension for files to be indexed (html/htm/xhtml etc.)
html.extension=html

# Set this to false if you don't need a search tab.
webhelp.include.search.tab=true

# indexer-language is used to tell the search indexer which language
# the docbook is written. This will be used to identify the correct
# stemmer, and punctuations that differs from language to language.
# see the documentation for details. en=English, fr=French, de=German,
# zh=Chinese, ja=Japanese etc.
webhelp.indexer.language=en

# Enables/Disables stemming
# Stemming allows better querying for the search
enable.stemming=true

# Set admon.graphics to 1 to user graphics for note, tip, etc.
admon.graphics=0
suppress.footer.navigation=0


Test the package by running the command ant
webhelp -Doutput-dir=test-ouput
at the command
line in the webhelp directory. It should generate a copy
of this documentation in the >doc directory. Type start
test-output\index.html
to open the output in a
browser. Once you have confirmed that the process worked,
you can delete the >test-output directory.


To process your own document, simply refer to this package from another
build.xml in arbitrary location on your system:


Create a new build.xml file that defines the name of your
source file, the desired output directory, and imports the
build.xml from this package. For example:
<project>
<property name="input-xml" value="path-to/yourfile.xml"/>
<property name="input-images-dirs" value="images/** figures/** graphics/**"/>
<property name="output-dir" value="path-to/desired-output-dir"/>
<import file="path-to/docbook-webhelp/build.xml"/>
</project>


From the directory containing your newly created build.xml
file, type ant webhelp to build your document.







To deep link to a topic inside the help set, simply link directly to the page. This help
system uses no frameset, so nothing further is necessary.
See Chunking into
multiple HTML files in Bob Stayton's url="http://www.sagehill.net/docbookxsl/index.html">DocBook XSL: The Complete
Guide for information on controlling output file names and which files are
chunked in DocBook.

When you perform a search, the results can include brief summaries. These are populated
in one of two ways:

By adding role="summary" to a para or
phrase in the chapter or
section.


By adding an abstract to the chapterinfo or
sectioninfo element.


To customize the look and feel of the help, study the following css files:

docs/common/css/positioning.css: This handles the Positioning
of DIVs in appropriate positions. For example, it causes the
leftnavigation div to appear on the left, the header on top, and so on.
Use this if you need to change the relative positions or need to change the
width/height etc.


docs/common/jquery/theme-redmond/jquery-ui-1.8.2.custom.css:
This is the theming part which adds colors and stuff. This is a default theme comes
with jqueryui unchanged. You can get
any theme based your interest from this. (Themes are on right navigation bar.) Then
replace the css theme folder (theme-redmond) with it, and change the xsl to point to
the new css.


docs/common/jquery/treeview/jquery.treeview.css: This styles
the toc Tree. Generally, you don't have to edit this file.




If you are serving a long document from an Apache web
server, we recommend you make the following additions or
changes to your httpd.conf or
.htaccess file. AddDefaultCharSet UTF-8 #

# 480 weeks
<FilesMatch "\.(ico|pdf|flv|jpg|jpeg|png|gif|js|css|swf)$"> #
Header set Cache-Control "max-age=290304000, public"
</FilesMatch>

# 2 DAYS
<FilesMatch "\.(xml|txt)$">
Header set Cache-Control "max-age=172800, public, must-revalidate"
</FilesMatch>

# 2 HOURS
<FilesMatch "\.(html|htm)$">
Header set Cache-Control "max-age=7200, must-revalidate"
</FilesMatch>

# compress text, html, javascript, css, xml:
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/plain #
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/html
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/xml
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/css
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/xml
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/xhtml+xml
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/rss+xml
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/javascript
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/x-javascript

# Or, compress certain file types by extension:
<Files *.html>
SetOutputFilter DEFLATE
</Files>


See url="http://www.sagehill.net/docbookxsl/SpecialChars.html"
>Odd characters in HTML output in Bob
Stayton's book DocBook XSL: The Complete
Guide for more information about this
setting.


These lines and those that follow cause the
browser to cache various resources such as bitmaps and
JavaScript files. Note that caching JavaScript files
could cause your users to have stale search indexes if
you update your document since the search index is
stored in JavaScript files.


These lines cause the the server to compress html,
css, and JavaScript files and the brower to uncompress
them to improve download performance.






Run ant index in the webhelp directory to index the content. Running
ant webhelp will do the indexing as part of the process as well.
Here's some detailed information about invoking the indexer. The indexing process is
pretty smooth, so probably you doesn't need to be concerned with following details. Webhelp
Ant script does all the needed bits.


Following should be in the CLASSPATH.



webhelpindexer.jar,
lucene-analyzers-3.0.0.jar,
lucene-core-3.0.0.jar - These three are available in the
extensions/ directory of docsbook-xsl-1.76.1, and is automatically fetched to the
webhelp's Ant script. Go for a XSL snapshot if you can which contains the latest
version http://docbook.sourceforge.net/snapshot/


xercesImpl.jar, xml-apis.jar -
These two comes by default with Ant 1.8.0 or prior versions. These are available
under /usr/share/java directory of Linux distributions as well. Else, you may have
to download, and put them to jre/lib/endorsed.





The main class is com.nexwave.nquindexer.IndexerMain for the
version 1.76.1+. It's com.nexwave.nquindexer.IndexerTask for the
versions 1.76.0 and 1.76.1.



Needs two parameters as command-line arguments:



The folder where the files to be indexed reside




(Optional) language. defaults to "en". See build.properties for
details






We have changed the way we invoke the webhelp indexer from the Ant Task to
indexertask to direct invocation. This seems to have remove the
CLASSPATH issue some people were having.





search
indexing


indexer
CLASSPATH

To build the indexer, you must have installed the JDK version 1.5 or
higher and set the ANT_HOME environment variable.

ANT_HOME


indexer
building




To support stemming for a language, the search mechanism requires a stemmer implemented
in both Java and JavaScript. The Java version is used by the indexer and the JavaScript
verison is used to stem the user's input on the search form. Currently the search mechanism
supports stemming for English and German. In addition, Java stemmers are included for the
following languages. Therefore, to support these languages, you only need to implement the
stemmer in JavaScript and add it to the template. If you do undertake this task, please
consider contributing the JavaScript version back to this project and to url="http://snowball.tartarus.org/texts/stemmersoverview.html">Martin Porter's
project.

Danish


Dutch


Finnish


Hungarian


Italian


Norwegian


Portuguese


Romanian


Russian


Spanish


Swedish


Turkish


stemming




This section shows how to add images to WebHelp. For that, follow the simple procedure given.

Put the images in a subdirectory of your source file directory. For example
docsrc/images.


Then refer to those images from your docbook document.
Following image is from >webhelp/docsrs/images/sample.jpg. The docbook code is shown
below.












<figure>
<title>Sample</title>
<mediaobject>
<imageobject>
<imagedata fileref="images/sample.jpg" format="JPG"/>
</imageobject>
</mediaobject>
</figure>



The build.properties file controls what directories are copied
over from the source tree to the output
tree:# If your document has image directories that need to be copied
# to the output directory, you can list patterns here.
# See the Ant documentation for fileset for documentation
# on patterns.
input-images-dirs=images/**,figures/**,graphics/**






This chapter provides an overview of how webhelp is implemented.
The table of contents and search panes are implemented as divs and rendered as if they
were the left pane in a frameset. As a result, the page must save the state of the table of
contents and the search in cookies when you navigate away from a page. When you load a new
page, the page reads these cookies and restores the state of the table of contents tree and
search. The result is that the help system behaves exactly as if it were a frameset.


An overview of webhelp page structure.
DocBook WebHelp page structure is fully built on css-based design abandoning frameset
structure. Overall page structure can be divided in to three main sections

Header: Header is a separate Div which include company logo, navigation
button(prev, next etc.), page title and heading of parent topic.


Content: This includes the content of the documentation. The processing of this
part is done by url="http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current/xhtml/chunk.xsl"> DocBook
XSL Chunking customization. Few further css-styling applied from
positioning.css.


Left Navigation: This includes the table of contents and search tab. This is
customized using jquery-ui styling.


Tabbed Navigation: The navigation pane is organized in to two tabs. Contents
tab, and Search tab. Tabbed output is achieved using url="http://docs.jquery.com/UI/Tabs">JQuery Tabs plugin.


Table of Contents (TOC) tree: When building the chunked html from the docbook
file, Table of Contents is generated as an Unordered List (a list made from
<ul> <li> tags). When page loads in the browser, we apply
styling to it to achieve the nice look that you see. Styling for TOC tree is done
by a JQuery UI plugin called url="http://bassistance.de/jquery-plugins/jquery-plugin-treeview/">
TreeView. We can generate the tree easily by following javascript code:

//Generate the tree
$("#tree").treeview({
collapsed: true,
animated: "medium",
control: "#sidetreecontrol",
persist: "cookie"
});




Search Tab: This includes the search feature.





design




Overview design of Search mechanism.
The serching is a fully client-side implementation of querying texts for content
searching. There's no server involved. So, the search queries by the users are processed by
JavaScript inside the browser, and displays the matching results by comparing the query with
a simplified 'index' that too resides in JavaScript. Mainly the search mechanism has two
parts.

Indexing: First we need to traverse the content in
the docs folder and index the words in it. This is done
by webhelpindexer.jar in
xsl/extentions/ folder. You can
invoke it by ant index command from the
root of webhelp of directory. The source of
webhelpindexer is now moved to it's own location at
trunk/xsl-webhelpindexer/.
Checkout the Docbook trunk svn directory to get this
source. Then, do your changes and recompile it by simply
running ant command. My assumption is that
it can be opened by Netbeans IDE by one click. Or if you
are using IntelliJ Idea, you can simply create a new
project from existing sources. Indexer has extensive
support for features such as word scoring, stemming of
words, and support for languages English, German,
French. For CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) languages,
it uses bi-gram tokenizing to break up the words (since
CJK languages does not have spaces between
words).
When ant index is run, it generates five output files:

htmlFileList.js - This contains an array named
fl which stores details all the files indexed by the indexer.
Further, the doStem in it defines whether stemming should be used. It defaults
to false.


htmlFileInfoList.js -
This includes some meta data about the indexed
files in an array named fil. It
includes details about file name, file (html)
title, a summary of the content. Format would look
like, fil["4"]= "ch03.html@@@Developer
Docs@@@This chapter provides an overview of how
webhelp is implemented.";




index-*.js (Three index files) - These three files
actually stores the index of the content. Index is added to an array named
w.




Querying: Query processing happens totally in client side. Following JavaScript
files handles them.

nwSearchFnt.js - This handles the user query and
returns the search results. It does query word tokenizing, drop unnecessary
punctuations and common words, do stemming if docbook language supports it,
etc.


{$indexer-language-code}_stemmer.js - This includes the
stemming library. nwSearchFnt.js file calls
stemmer method in this file for stemming. ex: var stem =
stemmer(foobar);








search



Adding new Stemmers is very simple.
Currently, only English, French, and German stemmers are integrated in to WebHelp. But
the code is extensible such that you can add new stemmers easily by few steps.
What you need:

You'll need two versions of the stemmer; One written in JavaScript, and another
in Java. But fortunately, Snowball contains Java stemmers for number of popular
languages, and are already included with the package. You can see the full list in
Adding support for other (non-CJKV) languages.
If your language is listed there, Then you have to find javascript version of the
stemmer. Generally, new stemmers are getting added in to url="http://snowball.tartarus.org/otherlangs/index.html">Snowball Stemmers in
other languages location. If javascript stemmer for your language is
available, then download it. Else, you can write a new stemmer in JavaScript using
SnowBall algorithm fairly easily. Algorithms are at url="http://snowball.tartarus.org/">Snowball.


Then, name the JS stemmer exactly like this:
{$language-code}_stemmer.js.
For example, for Italian(it), name it as,
it_stemmer.js. Then, copy it to
the
docbook-webhelp/template/search/stemmers/
folder. (I assumed
docbook-webhelp is the root
folder for webhelp.)
Make sure you changed the
webhelp.indexer.language property
in build.properties to your
language.




Now two easy changes needed for the indexer.


Open
docbook-webhelp/indexer/src/com/nexwave/nquindexer/IndexerTask.java
in a text editor and add your language code to the
supportedLanguages String Array.


change the Array from,

private String[] supportedLanguages= {"en", "de", "fr", "cn", "ja", "ko"};
//currently extended support available for
// English, German, French and CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) languages only.

To,

private String[] supportedLanguages= {"en", "de", "fr", "cn", "ja", "ko", "it"};
//currently extended support available for
// English, German, French, CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean), and Italian languages only.




Now, open
docbook-webhelp/indexer/src/com/nexwave/nquindexer/SaxHTMLIndex.java
and add the following line to the code where it initializes the Stemmer (Search
for SnowballStemmer stemmer;). Then add code to initialize the
stemmer Object in your language. It's self understandable. See the example. The
class names are at:
docbook-webhelp/indexer/src/com/nexwave/stemmer/snowball/ext/.



SnowballStemmer stemmer;
if(indexerLanguage.equalsIgnoreCase("en")){
stemmer = new EnglishStemmer();
} else if (indexerLanguage.equalsIgnoreCase("de")){
stemmer= new GermanStemmer();
} else if (indexerLanguage.equalsIgnoreCase("fr")){
stemmer= new FrenchStemmer();
}
else if (indexerLanguage.equalsIgnoreCase("it")){ //If language code is "it" (Italian)
stemmer= new italianStemmer(); //Initialize the stemmer to italianStemmer object.
}
else {
stemmer = null;
}







That's all. Now run ant build-indexer to compile and build the java code.
Then, run ant webhelp to generate the output from your docbook file. For any
questions, contact us or email to the docbook mailing list
docbook-apps@lists.oasis-open.org.

stemmer







Frequently Asked Questions






On what browsers and operating systems WebHelp has tested extensively?


We tested it with versions of most browsers including Firefox 3.x+, IE 7+, Chrome,
Safari, and iPod/iPhone. The JavaScript codes are mostly jquery plugins, so you’d want
to check the jquery support matrix for details.




Apart from this demo, where can I find other demos or production deployments of
WebHelp?


There are four production deployments provided in url="http://wiki.docbook.org/WebHelp">WebHelp wiki currently.




When building the webhelp output, I'm getting the following error. What's the reason
for this?
[xslt] : Warning! file:/C:/Users/kasun/docbook-xsl-1.77.0/xhtml/autoidx.xsl:
line 596: Attribute 'href' outside of element.
[xslt] : Warning! file:/C:/Users/kasun/docbook-xsl-1.77.0/xhtml/autoidx.xsl:
line 596: Attribute 'href' outside of element.
----


This happens if you haven't done the step 3 and 4 of webhelp build guide "Generating
webhelp output" in the documentation. Basically, you need to correctly set the following
folder
paths.xslt-processor-classpath=/usr/share/java/saxon-6.5.5.jar
xercesImpl.jar=/usr/share/java/xercesImpl.jar
xml-apis.jar=/usr/share/java/xml-apis.jar




Does WebHelp Indexer can index HTML transformation as well?


Yes, WebHelp supports HTML transformations as well in addition to XHTML.




I need more information about webhelp-indexer. Where can I find it?


The DocBook Webhelp Indexer is based on the HTMLSearch plugin for DITA. See url="http://www.helpml.com:8088/help/index.jsp?topic=/org.sample.help.doc/htmlsearch/DHSC_BestPractices_htmlsearch.html"
>HTMLSearch documentation for more information.




FAQ