Mizuho documentation formatting tool

Mizuho is a documentation formatting tool, best suited for small to medium-sized documentation. One writes documentation in plain text files, which Mizuho then converts to nicely formatted HTML.

Mizuho supports input files in Asciidoc format. Asciidoc is a text formatting tool, used by e.g. Git for its documentation. Thanks to Asciidoc, Mizuho supports a large number of formatting options.

Under the hood

Mizuho is actually a wrapper around Asciidoc. Asciidoc itself can only generate single-page XHTML output. Mizuho extends Asciidoc by providing multi-page XHTML output support and support for multiple templates.

Features and highlights

  • You can output the documentation in a single XHTML file, or in multiple XHTML files (one per chapter).
  • Output is fully customizable via ERB templates.
  • Based on Asciidoc and supports all Asciidoc formatting commands.
  • Comes bundled with Asciidoc so you don't have to install it yourself. Mizuho Just Works(tm) out-of-the-box.

Requirements

  • hpricot (gem install hpricot)
  • Python (because Asciidoc is written in Python)
  • GNU Source-highlight, if you want syntax highlighting support

Installation

Run the following command as root:

gem install FooBarWidget-mizuho

Usage

First, read the Asciidoc manual to learn the input file format: http://www.methods.co.nz/asciidoc/userguide.html

Next, write an input file and save it in a .txt file.

Finally, convert the .txt file to a single XHTML file with Mizuho, with the default template:

mizuho input.txt

This will generate 'input.html'. Or, you can convert it to multiple XHTML files that also have a different look:

mizuho input.txt --template manualsonrails --multi-page

Take a look at the 'templates' directory for available templates.

Credits

This tool is named after Kazami Mizuho from the 2003 anime 'Onegai Teacher'.