PostgreSQL has four primary documentation
formats:
Plain text, for pre-installation information
HTML, for on-line browsing and reference
PDF or Postscript, for printing
man pages, for quick reference.
Additionally, a number of plain-text README files can
be found throughout the PostgreSQL source tree,
documenting various implementation issues.
HTML documentation and man pages are part of a
standard distribution and are installed by default. PDF and
Postscript format documentation is available separately for
download.
The documentation sources are written in
DocBook, which is a markup language
superficially similar to HTML. Both of these
languages are applications of the Standard Generalized
Markup Language, SGML, which is
essentially a language for describing other languages. In what
follows, the terms DocBook and SGML are both
used, but technically they are not interchangeable.
DocBook allows an author to specify the
structure and content of a technical document without worrying
about presentation details. A document style defines how that
content is rendered into one of several final forms. DocBook is
maintained by the OASIS group. The official DocBook site has good introductory and reference documentation and
a complete O'Reilly book for your online reading pleasure. The
NewbieDoc Docbook Guide is very helpful for beginners.
The FreeBSD Documentation Project also uses DocBook and has some good
information, including a number of style guidelines that might be
worth considering.