Q: (X)HTML-compendium for download
by Michael Uplawski from LinuxQuestions.org on (#4X2TF)
I hope you do not expect this to be a simple flat question.
In ancient times, there was a mythical thing, called in German "SelfHTML", meaning "SelfHTML" in English, although I cannot know what you make of that title.
In short, *The Book of all Books* has evolved into something awkward, very unhandy and I do no longer want to use it.
Online-tutorials and -manuals for (X)HTML are cool but I write stuff where there is no Internet-connection, sometimes. And alas, I appear to be unable to locate on the Internet a complete and downloadable (X)HTML manual or -reference. w3schools or similar sites help me as I tend to forget the use of some CSS attributes and syntax. JavaScript is not at all needed, but nice to have.
All this had been perfectly packed into navigable offline documentation, once, and I could even install it via the package-management of my Linux-distribution. They broke it.
What I want is a digital book (possibly in HTML). I have them in paper, already.
If you know something


In ancient times, there was a mythical thing, called in German "SelfHTML", meaning "SelfHTML" in English, although I cannot know what you make of that title.
In short, *The Book of all Books* has evolved into something awkward, very unhandy and I do no longer want to use it.
Online-tutorials and -manuals for (X)HTML are cool but I write stuff where there is no Internet-connection, sometimes. And alas, I appear to be unable to locate on the Internet a complete and downloadable (X)HTML manual or -reference. w3schools or similar sites help me as I tend to forget the use of some CSS attributes and syntax. JavaScript is not at all needed, but nice to have.
All this had been perfectly packed into navigable offline documentation, once, and I could even install it via the package-management of my Linux-distribution. They broke it.
What I want is a digital book (possibly in HTML). I have them in paper, already.
If you know something