Paul Gay's profile

tomehost SaaS documentation platform

The login form simple and uncluttered with bold accents for validation labels.
The registration collects the bare minimum information to create an account.
The listing of 'tomes' (documents)
Tomes can use a company or project logo. The name of a tome is used within the URL, as the subdomain.
User management adopts a similar style.
Larger tomes when viewed in draft mode (work in progress); the root will format a table of contents in the main window.
Right clicking on the left treeview brings up a context menu from which new sections or content can be added. The small grey arrows next to headings and sections on the main area perform a similar task.
Clicking on content in draft view turns it to an editable text box; the formatting options for the wysiwyg editor appear in a fixed location toolbar rather than within the editable areas themselves, in order to preserve page formatting and avoid content having to move to accommodate the menus.
Code sections turn into raw text when clicked, and the type of code can be chosen from a menu in order to syntax highlight it properly.
Any heading or subheading can be viewed in the main area. This allows support staff to direct users to only the content required; either a deep nested small subsection (for specific information) or a more general section heading (for a broader overview).
Content is searchable.
Many types of content are supported; text, warnings, info-blocks, code, images, file downloads and videos. More will be added in future.
The whole interface is responsive, so you can create and edit content from a mobile device.
The content you create will also be served responsively, ensuring users always get content presented in the best possible way.
tomehost SaaS documentation platform
Published:

tomehost SaaS documentation platform

Design and implementation of documentation authoring SaaS

Published:

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