Let me talk a little bit about the differences between the desktop application and web version.
- Both share the same basic idea: You design a hierarchical tree-like structure of options, which are used to assemble an output document by mixing and matching sections.
- The web version is much more focused on letting people create tree-form document definitions that are meant to be shared and used by others; it therefor supports wiki-like shared editing of group treeform documents, a discussion thread for each document, document tag cloud, etc.
- Unlike the desktop application, the web version has no graphical nice user interface for creating the tree-form definitions; the web version uses a plain text xml definition that the author provides.
- The web version supports more flexible formatting of output, including things like bolding, italics, section headers, web links, and glossary/mouseover notes.
- The web version supports multiple output containers -- useful if you want to divide up your output document into things like a main body, an appendix, an area for private notes, etc.
- The web version has more robust support for free-form input variables; it knows which input variables are needed and when, and let's the user see clearly when a variable is needed.
- The web version has some nice effects to help you see when text blocks are being added/removed/changed.
- The desktop version support quick customization of the text of any section without editing the tree definition; not so with the web version.
- The web version will soon support PDF export and emailing.
- The web version can be easily expanded to support more powerful conditional blocks and expressions.
- The web version supports hover-over tips on tree items and selected document text.
The easiest way to get a feel for the web version is to check out a
sample form and click the "View XML Source" button -- that will show you the xml definition of the sample tree-form document, so you can get an idea of the kinds of things you can do.