-Inform Beginner's Guide, 4th Edition
-====================================
+Inform Beginner's Guide
+=======================
Introduction
------------
-This repository contains the sources for the 4th edition of the
+This repository contains the sources for an updated version of the
[Inform Beginner's Guide](http://www.firthworks.com/roger/IBG.html),
-henceforth known as the IBG. The new edition will be in a new source
-format that's more contributor-friendly (see below). It's a
-work-in-progress; see the [issue tracker](https://github.com/i6/ibg/issues)
-for how it's going.
-
-The rationale for this 4th edition is:
+henceforth known as the IBG. This version is in a new source format that's
+more version-control and contributor-friendly:
+[Sphinx](http://sphinx-doc.org), a documentation build tool written in
+[Python](http://python.org). With Sphinx, the source files are in a very
+readable format called
+[reStructuredText](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ReStructuredText).
+
+This version of the IBG is a work-in-progress; see the
+[issue tracker](https://github.com/i6/ibg/issues) for how it's going.
+Initially it will be a straight conversion of the 3rd edition. After that,
+the 4th edition will be prepared. The rationale for a 4th edition is:
* There have been quite a few updates to Inform and its support libraries
in the time since 2004, when the 3rd edition was published.
* Some old web links have gone away, to be replaced by new and better
ones.
+If you want a preview of how the online HTML version of the new guide
+looks, you can find it [here](http://inform-beginners-guide.readthedocs.org).
+
Building from source
--------------------
-The new source format is [Sphinx](http://sphinx-doc.org), a documentation
-build tool written in [Python](http://python.org), which you will need to
-install if you want to build the document. You can find the complete
-installation instructions
-[here](http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/install.html).
+As well as these document sources, you will need:
-After you have Sphinx installed, you can build the HTML version of the
-guide from a command prompt, like this:
+* Sphinx. You can find the complete installation instructions
+ [here](http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/install.html).
- make html
+* [Blockdiag](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/blockdiag) is used for some of
+ the diagrams.
-Other formats are available; just type `make` for more details.
+* To create the HTML version, you'll need a recent (>=0.7.8) version of the
+ [Alabaster](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/alabaster) theme.
-Conversion strategy
--------------------
+If you have `pip`, this command will be all you need:
-The first three editions of the IBG were created with
-[Adobe FrameMaker](http://www.adobe.com/products/framemaker.html). And the
-FrameMaker source files have kindly been supplied by Roger Firth to make
-this update, which opened up the possibility of creating an auto-converter.
+ pip install -U sphinx blockdiag alabaster
-But unfortunately, what with FrameMaker being proprietary, there isn't much
-out there apart from FrameMaker itself that can read them. I was hoping
-that conversion using [Mif2Go](http://mif2go.com) might be a possibility,
-but it turns out that that's just a plugin for FrameMaker. I guess I could
-get a trial FrameMaker license, try to set up the plugin and get it to
-autoconvert to some usable format, but it all looks far too messy. But on
-the plus side, the supplied GIF images are totally usable.
+After you have everything installed, you can build the HTML version of the
+guide from a command prompt, like this:
+
+ make html
-So, it's back to my original plan: use the PDF file. Here's the first
-(major) part of the work:
+For building the PDF version, you need a reasonably recent installation
+of TeX Live. Release 2014 will do. You will also need the iftex
+package, which may or may not be automatically installed. For Debian
+and Debian-derived systems, the "texlive-generic-extra" package will
+take care of this.
-* Dump the text out of the PDF file
-* Convert all the text to Sphinx format
-* Get the online version to look good
+You will also need the Emerald font package from
+https://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/fonts/emerald/. This cannot be
+installed with `tlmgr`, nor does it seem to be packaged by the usual
+Linux or BSD distributions. Scripts for installing and uninstalling
+Emerald are provided in the `tools` directory. When you're ready, type
+this:
-After that comes the 4th edition changes, hopefully in collaboration with
-others. Also, in parallel with that, other niceties:
+ make latexpdf
-* Add a glossary
-* Add an index
-* Add Inform syntax highlighting
-* Prepare a new PDF version, via the Sphinx LaTeX converter
+Other formats are available; just type `make` for more details.