That’s certainly not my intention. I made that page on the website, I partly made the epub, I made the PDF. I’m trying to understand if I can improve things and how, but at any question or challenge you seem immediately offended and I don’t get it.
OK, the page I clicked on says:
<li>English <a href="[https://docs.darktable.org/usermanual/4.6/en/](view-source:https://docs.darktable.org/usermanual/4.6/en/)">html</a>/<a href="[https://docs.darktable.org/usermanual/4.6/en/darktable_user_manual.epub](view-source:https://docs.darktable.org/usermanual/4.6/en/darktable_user_manual.epub)">epub</a>/<a href="[https://docs.darktable.org/usermanual/4.6/en/darktable_user_manual.pdf](view-source:https://docs.darktable.org/usermanual/4.6/en/darktable_user_manual.pdf)">pdf</a></li>
resulting in:
Some might prefer something like:
English:
link to html
link to epublink to pdfpardon the poor HTML formatting - been years since I used it …
TBH there’s really no reason to have all three links since if you click the first (html) one, the page you’re sent to contains links to the other two.
Good point; so all one would need is “English” as a link to the ‘html’ URL e.g.
darktable manuals:
English
. Brazilian
. etc
. etc
Hoping that @paperdigits is at least thinking about …

TBH there’s really no reason to have all three links since if you click the first (html) one, the page you’re sent to contains links to the other two.
it saves people a click, and the links in the manual are sort of buried in the text.

Hoping that @paperdigits is at least thinking about …
Sure I am, that’s why I replied to you in the first place.