Microsoft Help 2


Microsoft Help 2.x is a proprietary format for online help files, developed by Microsoft and first released in 2001 as a help system for Visual Studio.NET and MSDN Library.
Microsoft Help 2.x is the help engine used in Microsoft Visual Studio 2002/2003/2005/2008 and Office 2007 and Office 2010. Help files are made with the Help 2.0 Workshop, a help authoring tool. The default viewer for Help 2.x files is Microsoft Document Explorer, and there are several third-party viewers available such as H2Viewer and Help Explorer Viewer.
Visual Studio 2010 uses a new help engine, Microsoft Help Viewer.

History

A Microsoft Help 2.x file has a ".hxs" extension. A compressed.HxS help file is compiled from a set of topic pages written in a subset of HTML, a.HxC main project file, an.HxF include file, a.HxT table of contents, a.HxA attribute definition file, and a number of.HxK indexes.
Specifics of the format can be found in an unofficial "ITOLITLS" format specification. An open source "convertlit" tool can be used to decompile the hxs file.

Applications

This format was originally intended only for the help system used by Visual Studio.NET 2002 help, MSDN Library and TechNet, but now it is used in Office 2007 and some IDEs, such as Borland Developer Studio.
An Assistance Platform help format based on a new XML-based markup language called Microsoft Assistance Markup Language was originally part of the Longhorn project. It introduced a "guided help" feature that highlights what parts of the screen to interact with. It can also use this information to automate a task if the user accepts. Microsoft eventually decided against including ACW in Windows Vista. The compiled.H1s help format, along with the HelpPane viewer, remained in Windows Vista and Windows 7. It is similar to H2's Hxs format. A third party "xHelpMarkup" tool for compiling and decompiling exists, but it is only a wrapper around the BDD 2007 apcompnt and apss.dll tools.