
Jon Fairbairn wrote:
A hyperlink of the form <a href="http://.../long-research-paper.html#interesting-paragraph"> interesting bit</a> is far more useful than one of the form <a href="http://.../long-research-paper.pdf">look for section 49.7.3</a>. It may not seem significant, but when one is attempting to learn some new part of Haskell it's really off-putting.
Pdfs are not that bad. You can hyper link into them too. It would look like: <a href="http://.../long-research-paper.pdf#page=45"> ... to open the pdf a position you on page 45 of it or like: <a href="http://.../long-research-paper.pdf#anchorName"> ... to open the pdf and position you on anchor anchorName You can do it from command line too: acrord32 /A page=45 long-research-paper.pdf acrord32 /A anchorName long-research-paper.pdf This of course requires the source to give you more precise link. But here there is no difference from html only ... possibly ... more people know about html linking than pdf linking. The above definitely works OK on windows, not sure about linux pdf viewers. Unfortunately I cannot find now how you can look at all anchors defined in a pdf (so that you can use something better than page=<num>). Peter.