Thanks for the update - changes went into rev 7541
You're welcome.
Hm, I'm not really sure why you attach so many files and go through such a huge effort to explain the file structure. Take a look at the zip archive I have attached: it contains exactly the same files you have added, but only within one archive. Looking at the archive you can see the structure pretty easily.
You're right - I agree that the file structure is much clearer, but it seems not so easy/fast for me to create it (specially here at work) if files are in several directories, using the tools I have.
Anyway, if this is an issue, tell me so and I'll manage.
However: the file script.zip is broken for me (file size is zero) - I wasn't able to extract it's contents. Please re-attach!
Sorry! Don't know what happened. Here it is.
The file is already too big, consuming too many resources on older clients. Adding even more to it is not an option imo.
About time to render, I can confirm: we use IE6 here (don't ask nor laugh, please), and it takes more than 30s to display.
Here at work we had a 1Mb HTML file (nearly all the code was a JS script) that created nested tables up to 8 levels deep on the fly and took nearly 1 min. to render. But after creating just the 1st level, and populating only the nested table rows and cells the user clicked on, it takes less than 1sec. I'll try to figure out if that idea can help here.
The toc.htm file is the save fallback if JavaScript is not available for whatever reason. You don't have to update it frequently, but only before the actual release, using the output generated in your browser. If you don't know what I mean, don't worry: I'll take care of that.
That sounded easy. I'm attaching toc.htm too. Hope that was the idea.
Use a diff viewer like WinMerge to figure out differences between files on your client. Use the diff viewer built-into the web svn to figure out differences between revisions (example link). Alternatively, use the diff viewer built into your local svn app (assuming that you are using TortoiseSVN or a similar graphical client).
Hmmm... No, I don't use that tools. Here we use UltraEdit (has a quite good diff viewer plugin), and I've just installed notepad++ at home (used to work with an old Ultraedit version). I'll try to manage with the svn diff viewer.
Regards,