Unfortunately, I have to agree with many of the users on here about the lack of a clean/concise '.pdf'-type of manual. DO NOT get me wrong...........I am appreciative for ANY help docs, links, articles, tutorials and the like, however, my user level is more or less in its infancy and I have been struggling through the online material. There are simply so many links to so many different articles that it gets confusing rather quickly. Thereby adding more confusion to the learning process.
I, too, (I'm afraid), am old school and prefer a static ".pdf" format with TOC and index for finding specific features quickly. The online support docs are simply painful to navigate through and by the time I find what I'm looking for............I've broken my train of thought on the project I'm trying to develop. I know, (or hope at least), this will abate once I get higher on the learning curve of the program(s), but is is extremely painful and discouraging at the moment. That is probably why you (CC people) are hearing so many remarks about it.
Online resources, (I think), makes it easier for CC people to keep things updated. It also keeps users coming back to your site; thereby helping you keep tabs on traffic and such; (which I'm sure is NOT the intent). However, resolution of this "manual issue" could be done with a ".pdf" manual and then just put out revisions when necessary. But wait.........it takes a great deal of work to put forth such a doc??!? Maybe, but is also takes a great deal of work to put together and refresh article after article.
I, for one, work in the electronics repair industry and rely on ".pdf"s all the time for acclimating to the many different types of equipment we work on. I am also notorious for keeping (and properly labeling to archive) service/help docs and software as it comes out. This permits staying up to date AND gives me something to fall back on when a new version of something is buggy; (cause we all know THAT never happens).
In an attempt to solve my CC support docs issue...............I have, literally, started my own index of terms, features and procedures which then link back to the particular article which helped. Then again...........when our roof leaked and the landlord would not fix it.........we built a completely separate sub-structure that, basically, aqueducted the incoming leakage back out of the building. A timely chore in and of itself, (and a nuisance), but we all do's what we gots ta do.
Please do not get me wrong.............I, too, am a big fan of CoffeeCup and have pretty close to most of their software; (albeit I use only a fraction of it.......at the moment). My point.........I'm not simply looking for a reason to throw stones. That being said, if you, (CoffeeCup people), are hearing the same complaint over and over again...........you might want to reassess. Not all people are born as lovers of CoffeCup and the problem seems to be turning some users away to other resources.
All imho, of course. </rant>