
Profiles are used when generating your Multiscreen HTML5 help, and can be integrated with your application for the generated profile, so that you have a little bit of control over how your help looks on a particular device. These are located in the Project Set-up pod, and include six default types of devices that could display your help output: Screen Profiles allow you to define a particular screen resolution and browser type to preview your project. To produce multi-screen help, you must define Screen Profiles and Screen Layouts. Thus, what it calls “Multiscreen HTML5” output is pretty much just adapting CSS3 to implement its single-sourcing options. In practical terms, RoboHelp 10 offers no substantial changes from an authoring standpoint.


Judging from RoboHelp 10, however, Adobe saw the future and started adapting to it. After all, some aspects of HTML5 were seen as frontal assaults on the dominance of Flash, the Adobe proprietary standard for web animation. Some folks were skeptical when Adobe announced they were embracing the HTML5 and CSS3 standards fully.
#Adobe robohelp help pdf#

Interested in Adobe RoboHelp? Check out our RoboHelp 11 First Look Review
