diff --git a/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/ports/chapter.sgml b/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/ports/chapter.sgml
index e1b8be6df9..9a052d28b7 100644
--- a/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/ports/chapter.sgml
+++ b/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/ports/chapter.sgml
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
 <!--
      The FreeBSD Documentation Project
 
-     $Id: chapter.sgml,v 1.44 1999-08-18 18:58:10 nik Exp $
+     $Id: chapter.sgml,v 1.45 1999-08-23 21:06:02 nik Exp $
 -->
-
+  
 <chapter id="ports">
   <title>Installing Applications: The Ports collection</title>
   
@@ -513,31 +513,42 @@ do-install:
   <sect1>
     <title>Some Questions and Answers</title>
     
-    <itemizedlist>
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I thought this was going to be a discussion about
+    <qandaset>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I thought this was going to be a discussion about
 	  modems??!</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Ah.  You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Ah.  You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of
 	  your computer.  We are using &ldquo;port&rdquo; here to mean the
 	  result of &ldquo;porting&rdquo; a program from one version of Unix
 	  to another.  (It is an unfortunate bad habit of computer people to
 	  use the same word to refer to several completely different
 	  things).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
 	  programs?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing
 	  it.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  So why bother with ports then?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Several reasons:-</para>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>So why bother with ports then?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Several reasons:-</para>
 	
 	<orderedlist>
 	  <listitem>
@@ -576,24 +587,32 @@ do-install:
 	      -->;-)</para>
 	  </listitem>
 	</orderedlist>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-patch"> Q.  What is a patch?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-patch"> What is a patch?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go
 	  from one version of a file to another.  It contains text that says,
 	  in effect, things like &ldquo;delete line 23&rdquo;, &ldquo;add
 	  these two lines after line 468&rdquo; or &ldquo;change line 197 to
 	  this&rdquo;.  Also known as a &ldquo;diff&rdquo;, since it is
 	  generated by a program of that name.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-tarball"> Q.  What is all this about
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-tarball"> What is all this about
 	  tarballs?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  It is a file ending in <filename>.tar</filename> or
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>It is a file ending in <filename>.tar</filename> or
 	  <filename>.tar.gz</filename> (with variations like
 	  <filename>.tar.Z</filename>, or even <filename>.tgz</filename> if
 	  you are trying to squeeze the names into a DOS filesystem).</para>
@@ -613,22 +632,28 @@ do-install:
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar xzvf foobar.tar.gz</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar tvf foobar.tar</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar xvf foobar.tar</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-checksum"> Q.  And a checksum?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-checksum">And a checksum?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the
 	  file you want to check.  If any of the characters change, the
 	  checksum will no longer be equal to the total, so a simple
 	  comparison will allow you to spot the difference.  (In practice, it
 	  is done in a more complicated way to spot problems like
 	  position-swapping, which will not show up with a simplistic
 	  addition).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I did what you said for <link linkend="ports-cd">compiling
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I did what you said for <link linkend="ports-cd">compiling
 	    ports from a CDROM</link> and it worked great until I tried to
 	  install the kermit port:-</para>
 
@@ -637,38 +662,48 @@ do-install:
 &gt;&gt; Attempting to fetch from ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/.</screen>
 		
 	<para>Why can it not be found? Have I got a dud CDROM?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the
 	  tarball for it on the CDROM, so you will have to fetch it by hand
 	  &mdash; sorry! The reason why you got all those error messages was
 	  because you were not connected to the Internet at the time.  Once
 	  you have downloaded it from any of the sites above, you can re-start
 	  the process (try and choose the nearest site to you, though, to save
 	  your time and the Internet's bandwidth).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I did that, but when I tried to put it into
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I did that, but when I tried to put it into
 	  <filename>/usr/ports/distfiles</filename> I got some error about not
 	  having permission.</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports/distfiles</filename>, but you will not be able
 	  to copy anything there because it is sym-linked to the CDROM, which
 	  is read-only.  You can tell it to look somewhere else by
 	  doing</para>
 	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>make DISTDIR=<replaceable>/where/you/put/it</replaceable> install</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports</filename>? My system administrator says I must
 	  put everything under
 	  <filename>/u/people/guests/wurzburger</filename>, but it does not
 	  seem to work.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  You can use the <makevar>PORTSDIR</makevar> and
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>You can use the <makevar>PORTSDIR</makevar> and
 	  <makevar>PREFIX</makevar> variables to tell the ports mechanism to
 	  use different directories.  For instance,</para>
 	
@@ -693,15 +728,19 @@ do-install:
 	<para>If you do not fancy typing all that in every time you install a
 	  port (and to be honest, who would?), it is a good idea to put these
 	  variables into your environment.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all
 	  the tarballs handy on my system so I do not have to wait for a
 	  download every time I install a port.  Is there an easy way to get
 	  them all at once?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  To get every single tarball for the ports collection,
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>To get every single tarball for the ports collection,
 	  do</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
@@ -714,57 +753,77 @@ do-install:
 	      
 	<para>and for just one port &mdash; well, I think you have guessed
 	  already.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one
 	  of the FreeBSD mirror sites close by.  Is there any way to tell the
 	  port to fetch them from servers other than ones listed in the
 	  MASTER_SITES?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes.  If you know, for example, <hostid
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes.  If you know, for example, <hostid
 	    role="fqdn">ftp.FreeBSD.org</hostid> is much closer than sites
 	  listed in <makevar>MASTER_SITES</makevar>, do as following
 	  example.</para>
 
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports/<replaceable>directory</replaceable></userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE=ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/distfiles/ fetch</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I want to know what files make is going to need before it
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I want to know what files make is going to need before it
 	  tries to pull them down.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  <command>make fetch-list</command> will display a list of
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para><command>make fetch-list</command> will display a list of
 	  the files needed for a port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to
 	  do some hacking on the source before I install it, but it is a bit
 	  tiresome having  to watch it and hit control-C every time.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Doing <command>make extract</command> will stop it after it
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Doing <command>make extract</command> will stop it after it
 	  has fetched and extracted the source code.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to
 	  stop it compiling until I have had a chance to see if my patches
 	  worked properly.  Is there something like <command>make
 	    extract</command>, but for patches?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Yep, <command>make patch</command> is what you want.  You
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yep, <command>make patch</command> is what you want.  You
 	  will probably find the <makevar>PATCH_DEBUG</makevar> option useful
 	  as well.  And by the way, thank you for your efforts!</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is
 	  this true? How can I make sure that I compile ports with the right
 	  settings?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, with version 2.6.3 of <command>gcc</command> (the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, with version 2.6.3 of <command>gcc</command> (the
 	  version shipped with FreeBSD 2.1.0 and 2.1.5), the
 	  <option>-O2</option> option could result in buggy code unless you
 	  used the <option>-fno-strength-reduce</option> option as well.
@@ -772,7 +831,6 @@ do-install:
 	  <emphasis>should</emphasis> be able to specify the compiler options
 	  used by something like</para>
 	      
-	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>make CFLAGS='-O2 -fno-strength-reduce' install</userinput></screen>
 	      
 	<para>or by editing <filename>/etc/make.conf</filename>, but
@@ -781,13 +839,17 @@ do-install:
 	  and inspect the Makefiles by hand, but this can get tedious if the
 	  source has lots of sub-directories, each with their own
 	  Makefiles.</para>
-	    </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want.
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want.
 	  Is there a list anywhere of what ports are available?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Look in the <filename>INDEX</filename> file in
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Look in the <filename>INDEX</filename> file in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports</filename>.  If you would like to search the
 	  ports collection for a keyword, you can do that too.  For example,
 	  you can find ports relevant to the LISP programming language
@@ -795,28 +857,36 @@ do-install:
 
 	<screen>&prompt.user; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>make search key=lisp</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I went to install the <literal>foo</literal> port but the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I went to install the <literal>foo</literal> port but the
 	  system suddenly stopped compiling it and starting compiling the
 	  <literal>bar</literal> port.  What is going on?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  The <literal>foo</literal> port needs something that is
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The <literal>foo</literal> port needs something that is
 	  supplied with <literal>bar</literal> &mdash; for instance, if
 	  <literal>foo</literal> uses graphics, <literal>bar</literal> might
 	  have a library with useful graphics processing routines.  Or
 	  <literal>bar</literal> might be a tool that is needed to compile the
 	  <literal>foo</literal> port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-remove">  Q.  I installed the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-remove">  I installed the
 	  <literal>grizzle</literal> program from the ports and frankly it is
 	  a complete waste of disk space.  I want to delete it but I do not
 	  know where it put all the files.  Any clues?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No problem, just do</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No problem, just do</para>
 		      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>pkg_delete grizzle-6.5</userinput></screen>
 
@@ -824,27 +894,35 @@ do-install:
 
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd <replaceable>/usr/ports/somewhere/grizzle</replaceable></userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make deinstall</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
 	<para>
-	  Q.  Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use
+	  Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use
 	  that command.  You do not seriously expect me to remember that, do
 	  you??</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Not at all, you can find it out by doing</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Not at all, you can find it out by doing</para>
 	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>pkg_info -a | grep grizzle</userinput>
 Information for grizzle-6.5:
 grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arcade game.</screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be
 	  taking up an awful lot of room.  Is it safe to go in there and
 	  delete things?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly
 	  certain you will not need the source again, there is no point in
 	  keeping it hanging around.  The best way to do this is</para>
 	      
@@ -853,44 +931,60 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 		      
 	<para>which will go through all the ports subdirectories and delete
 	  everything except the skeletons for each port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or
 	  whatever you called them in the <filename>distfiles</filename>
 	  directory.  Can I delete those as well?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can
 	  go as well.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is
 	  there any way of installing all the ports in one go?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Just do</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Just do</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make install</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long
 	  time so I went to bed and left it to get on with it.  When I looked
 	  at the computer this morning, it had only done three and a half
 	  ports.  Did something go wrong?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you
 	  questions that we cannot answer for you (eg &ldquo;Do you want to
 	  print on A4 or US letter sized paper?&rdquo;) and they need to have
 	  someone on hand to answer them.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I really do not want to spend all day staring at the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I really do not want to spend all day staring at the
 	  monitor.  Any better ideas?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local
 	  park:-</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
@@ -903,15 +997,19 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make -DIS_INTERACTIVE install</userinput></screen>
 	      
 	<para>to finish the job.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  At work, we are using <literal>frobble</literal>, which is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>At work, we are using <literal>frobble</literal>, which is
 	  in your ports collection, but we have altered it quite a bit to get
 	  it to do what we need.  Is there any way of making our own packages,
 	  so we can distribute it more easily around our sites?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your
 	  changes:-</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd <replaceable>/usr/ports/somewhere/frobble</replaceable></userinput>
@@ -920,24 +1018,27 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 [Apply your patches]
 &prompt.root; <userinput>cd ../..</userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make package</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  This ports stuff is really clever.  I am desperate to find
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>This ports stuff is really clever.  I am desperate to find
 	  out how you did it.  What is the secret?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the
 	  <filename>bsd.ports.mk</filename> and
 	  <filename>bsd.ports.subdir.mk</filename> files in your <ulink
 	    URL="file://localhost/usr/ports/Mk/">makefiles
 	    directory.</ulink></para>
 
-	<note>
 	  <para>Readers with an aversion to intricate shell-scripts are
 	    advised not to follow this link...)</para>
-	</note>
-      </listitem>
-    </itemizedlist>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
+    </qandaset>
   </sect1>
   
   <sect1 id="porting">
@@ -4674,6 +4775,6 @@ pre-install:
      sgml-indent-data: t
      sgml-omittag: nil 
      sgml-always-quote-attributes: t 
-     sgml-parent-document: ("../handbook.sgml" "part" "chapter")
+     sgml-parent-document: ("../book.sgml" "part" "chapter")
      End: 
 -->
diff --git a/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml b/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml
index 98edea5052..0a9fed2742 100644
--- a/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml
+++ b/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
 <!--
      The FreeBSD Documentation Project
 
-     $Id: book.sgml,v 1.44 1999-08-18 18:58:10 nik Exp $
+     $Id: book.sgml,v 1.45 1999-08-23 21:06:02 nik Exp $
 -->
-
+  
 <chapter id="ports">
   <title>Installing Applications: The Ports collection</title>
   
@@ -513,31 +513,42 @@ do-install:
   <sect1>
     <title>Some Questions and Answers</title>
     
-    <itemizedlist>
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I thought this was going to be a discussion about
+    <qandaset>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I thought this was going to be a discussion about
 	  modems??!</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Ah.  You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Ah.  You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of
 	  your computer.  We are using &ldquo;port&rdquo; here to mean the
 	  result of &ldquo;porting&rdquo; a program from one version of Unix
 	  to another.  (It is an unfortunate bad habit of computer people to
 	  use the same word to refer to several completely different
 	  things).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
 	  programs?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing
 	  it.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  So why bother with ports then?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Several reasons:-</para>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>So why bother with ports then?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Several reasons:-</para>
 	
 	<orderedlist>
 	  <listitem>
@@ -576,24 +587,32 @@ do-install:
 	      -->;-)</para>
 	  </listitem>
 	</orderedlist>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-patch"> Q.  What is a patch?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-patch"> What is a patch?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go
 	  from one version of a file to another.  It contains text that says,
 	  in effect, things like &ldquo;delete line 23&rdquo;, &ldquo;add
 	  these two lines after line 468&rdquo; or &ldquo;change line 197 to
 	  this&rdquo;.  Also known as a &ldquo;diff&rdquo;, since it is
 	  generated by a program of that name.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-tarball"> Q.  What is all this about
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-tarball"> What is all this about
 	  tarballs?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  It is a file ending in <filename>.tar</filename> or
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>It is a file ending in <filename>.tar</filename> or
 	  <filename>.tar.gz</filename> (with variations like
 	  <filename>.tar.Z</filename>, or even <filename>.tgz</filename> if
 	  you are trying to squeeze the names into a DOS filesystem).</para>
@@ -613,22 +632,28 @@ do-install:
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar xzvf foobar.tar.gz</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar tvf foobar.tar</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar xvf foobar.tar</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-checksum"> Q.  And a checksum?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-checksum">And a checksum?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the
 	  file you want to check.  If any of the characters change, the
 	  checksum will no longer be equal to the total, so a simple
 	  comparison will allow you to spot the difference.  (In practice, it
 	  is done in a more complicated way to spot problems like
 	  position-swapping, which will not show up with a simplistic
 	  addition).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I did what you said for <link linkend="ports-cd">compiling
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I did what you said for <link linkend="ports-cd">compiling
 	    ports from a CDROM</link> and it worked great until I tried to
 	  install the kermit port:-</para>
 
@@ -637,38 +662,48 @@ do-install:
 &gt;&gt; Attempting to fetch from ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/.</screen>
 		
 	<para>Why can it not be found? Have I got a dud CDROM?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the
 	  tarball for it on the CDROM, so you will have to fetch it by hand
 	  &mdash; sorry! The reason why you got all those error messages was
 	  because you were not connected to the Internet at the time.  Once
 	  you have downloaded it from any of the sites above, you can re-start
 	  the process (try and choose the nearest site to you, though, to save
 	  your time and the Internet's bandwidth).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I did that, but when I tried to put it into
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I did that, but when I tried to put it into
 	  <filename>/usr/ports/distfiles</filename> I got some error about not
 	  having permission.</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports/distfiles</filename>, but you will not be able
 	  to copy anything there because it is sym-linked to the CDROM, which
 	  is read-only.  You can tell it to look somewhere else by
 	  doing</para>
 	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>make DISTDIR=<replaceable>/where/you/put/it</replaceable> install</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports</filename>? My system administrator says I must
 	  put everything under
 	  <filename>/u/people/guests/wurzburger</filename>, but it does not
 	  seem to work.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  You can use the <makevar>PORTSDIR</makevar> and
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>You can use the <makevar>PORTSDIR</makevar> and
 	  <makevar>PREFIX</makevar> variables to tell the ports mechanism to
 	  use different directories.  For instance,</para>
 	
@@ -693,15 +728,19 @@ do-install:
 	<para>If you do not fancy typing all that in every time you install a
 	  port (and to be honest, who would?), it is a good idea to put these
 	  variables into your environment.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all
 	  the tarballs handy on my system so I do not have to wait for a
 	  download every time I install a port.  Is there an easy way to get
 	  them all at once?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  To get every single tarball for the ports collection,
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>To get every single tarball for the ports collection,
 	  do</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
@@ -714,57 +753,77 @@ do-install:
 	      
 	<para>and for just one port &mdash; well, I think you have guessed
 	  already.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one
 	  of the FreeBSD mirror sites close by.  Is there any way to tell the
 	  port to fetch them from servers other than ones listed in the
 	  MASTER_SITES?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes.  If you know, for example, <hostid
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes.  If you know, for example, <hostid
 	    role="fqdn">ftp.FreeBSD.org</hostid> is much closer than sites
 	  listed in <makevar>MASTER_SITES</makevar>, do as following
 	  example.</para>
 
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports/<replaceable>directory</replaceable></userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE=ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/distfiles/ fetch</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I want to know what files make is going to need before it
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I want to know what files make is going to need before it
 	  tries to pull them down.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  <command>make fetch-list</command> will display a list of
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para><command>make fetch-list</command> will display a list of
 	  the files needed for a port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to
 	  do some hacking on the source before I install it, but it is a bit
 	  tiresome having  to watch it and hit control-C every time.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Doing <command>make extract</command> will stop it after it
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Doing <command>make extract</command> will stop it after it
 	  has fetched and extracted the source code.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to
 	  stop it compiling until I have had a chance to see if my patches
 	  worked properly.  Is there something like <command>make
 	    extract</command>, but for patches?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Yep, <command>make patch</command> is what you want.  You
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yep, <command>make patch</command> is what you want.  You
 	  will probably find the <makevar>PATCH_DEBUG</makevar> option useful
 	  as well.  And by the way, thank you for your efforts!</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is
 	  this true? How can I make sure that I compile ports with the right
 	  settings?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, with version 2.6.3 of <command>gcc</command> (the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, with version 2.6.3 of <command>gcc</command> (the
 	  version shipped with FreeBSD 2.1.0 and 2.1.5), the
 	  <option>-O2</option> option could result in buggy code unless you
 	  used the <option>-fno-strength-reduce</option> option as well.
@@ -772,7 +831,6 @@ do-install:
 	  <emphasis>should</emphasis> be able to specify the compiler options
 	  used by something like</para>
 	      
-	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>make CFLAGS='-O2 -fno-strength-reduce' install</userinput></screen>
 	      
 	<para>or by editing <filename>/etc/make.conf</filename>, but
@@ -781,13 +839,17 @@ do-install:
 	  and inspect the Makefiles by hand, but this can get tedious if the
 	  source has lots of sub-directories, each with their own
 	  Makefiles.</para>
-	    </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want.
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want.
 	  Is there a list anywhere of what ports are available?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Look in the <filename>INDEX</filename> file in
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Look in the <filename>INDEX</filename> file in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports</filename>.  If you would like to search the
 	  ports collection for a keyword, you can do that too.  For example,
 	  you can find ports relevant to the LISP programming language
@@ -795,28 +857,36 @@ do-install:
 
 	<screen>&prompt.user; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>make search key=lisp</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I went to install the <literal>foo</literal> port but the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I went to install the <literal>foo</literal> port but the
 	  system suddenly stopped compiling it and starting compiling the
 	  <literal>bar</literal> port.  What is going on?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  The <literal>foo</literal> port needs something that is
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The <literal>foo</literal> port needs something that is
 	  supplied with <literal>bar</literal> &mdash; for instance, if
 	  <literal>foo</literal> uses graphics, <literal>bar</literal> might
 	  have a library with useful graphics processing routines.  Or
 	  <literal>bar</literal> might be a tool that is needed to compile the
 	  <literal>foo</literal> port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-remove">  Q.  I installed the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-remove">  I installed the
 	  <literal>grizzle</literal> program from the ports and frankly it is
 	  a complete waste of disk space.  I want to delete it but I do not
 	  know where it put all the files.  Any clues?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No problem, just do</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No problem, just do</para>
 		      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>pkg_delete grizzle-6.5</userinput></screen>
 
@@ -824,27 +894,35 @@ do-install:
 
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd <replaceable>/usr/ports/somewhere/grizzle</replaceable></userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make deinstall</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
 	<para>
-	  Q.  Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use
+	  Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use
 	  that command.  You do not seriously expect me to remember that, do
 	  you??</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Not at all, you can find it out by doing</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Not at all, you can find it out by doing</para>
 	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>pkg_info -a | grep grizzle</userinput>
 Information for grizzle-6.5:
 grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arcade game.</screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be
 	  taking up an awful lot of room.  Is it safe to go in there and
 	  delete things?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly
 	  certain you will not need the source again, there is no point in
 	  keeping it hanging around.  The best way to do this is</para>
 	      
@@ -853,44 +931,60 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 		      
 	<para>which will go through all the ports subdirectories and delete
 	  everything except the skeletons for each port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or
 	  whatever you called them in the <filename>distfiles</filename>
 	  directory.  Can I delete those as well?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can
 	  go as well.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is
 	  there any way of installing all the ports in one go?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Just do</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Just do</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make install</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long
 	  time so I went to bed and left it to get on with it.  When I looked
 	  at the computer this morning, it had only done three and a half
 	  ports.  Did something go wrong?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you
 	  questions that we cannot answer for you (eg &ldquo;Do you want to
 	  print on A4 or US letter sized paper?&rdquo;) and they need to have
 	  someone on hand to answer them.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I really do not want to spend all day staring at the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I really do not want to spend all day staring at the
 	  monitor.  Any better ideas?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local
 	  park:-</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
@@ -903,15 +997,19 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make -DIS_INTERACTIVE install</userinput></screen>
 	      
 	<para>to finish the job.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  At work, we are using <literal>frobble</literal>, which is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>At work, we are using <literal>frobble</literal>, which is
 	  in your ports collection, but we have altered it quite a bit to get
 	  it to do what we need.  Is there any way of making our own packages,
 	  so we can distribute it more easily around our sites?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your
 	  changes:-</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd <replaceable>/usr/ports/somewhere/frobble</replaceable></userinput>
@@ -920,24 +1018,27 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 [Apply your patches]
 &prompt.root; <userinput>cd ../..</userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make package</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  This ports stuff is really clever.  I am desperate to find
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>This ports stuff is really clever.  I am desperate to find
 	  out how you did it.  What is the secret?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the
 	  <filename>bsd.ports.mk</filename> and
 	  <filename>bsd.ports.subdir.mk</filename> files in your <ulink
 	    URL="file://localhost/usr/ports/Mk/">makefiles
 	    directory.</ulink></para>
 
-	<note>
 	  <para>Readers with an aversion to intricate shell-scripts are
 	    advised not to follow this link...)</para>
-	</note>
-      </listitem>
-    </itemizedlist>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
+    </qandaset>
   </sect1>
   
   <sect1 id="porting">
@@ -4674,6 +4775,6 @@ pre-install:
      sgml-indent-data: t
      sgml-omittag: nil 
      sgml-always-quote-attributes: t 
-     sgml-parent-document: ("../handbook.sgml" "part" "chapter")
+     sgml-parent-document: ("../book.sgml" "part" "chapter")
      End: 
 -->
diff --git a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/ports/chapter.sgml b/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/ports/chapter.sgml
index e1b8be6df9..9a052d28b7 100644
--- a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/ports/chapter.sgml
+++ b/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/ports/chapter.sgml
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
 <!--
      The FreeBSD Documentation Project
 
-     $Id: chapter.sgml,v 1.44 1999-08-18 18:58:10 nik Exp $
+     $Id: chapter.sgml,v 1.45 1999-08-23 21:06:02 nik Exp $
 -->
-
+  
 <chapter id="ports">
   <title>Installing Applications: The Ports collection</title>
   
@@ -513,31 +513,42 @@ do-install:
   <sect1>
     <title>Some Questions and Answers</title>
     
-    <itemizedlist>
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I thought this was going to be a discussion about
+    <qandaset>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I thought this was going to be a discussion about
 	  modems??!</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Ah.  You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Ah.  You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of
 	  your computer.  We are using &ldquo;port&rdquo; here to mean the
 	  result of &ldquo;porting&rdquo; a program from one version of Unix
 	  to another.  (It is an unfortunate bad habit of computer people to
 	  use the same word to refer to several completely different
 	  things).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
 	  programs?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing
 	  it.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  So why bother with ports then?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Several reasons:-</para>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>So why bother with ports then?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Several reasons:-</para>
 	
 	<orderedlist>
 	  <listitem>
@@ -576,24 +587,32 @@ do-install:
 	      -->;-)</para>
 	  </listitem>
 	</orderedlist>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-patch"> Q.  What is a patch?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-patch"> What is a patch?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go
 	  from one version of a file to another.  It contains text that says,
 	  in effect, things like &ldquo;delete line 23&rdquo;, &ldquo;add
 	  these two lines after line 468&rdquo; or &ldquo;change line 197 to
 	  this&rdquo;.  Also known as a &ldquo;diff&rdquo;, since it is
 	  generated by a program of that name.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-tarball"> Q.  What is all this about
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-tarball"> What is all this about
 	  tarballs?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  It is a file ending in <filename>.tar</filename> or
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>It is a file ending in <filename>.tar</filename> or
 	  <filename>.tar.gz</filename> (with variations like
 	  <filename>.tar.Z</filename>, or even <filename>.tgz</filename> if
 	  you are trying to squeeze the names into a DOS filesystem).</para>
@@ -613,22 +632,28 @@ do-install:
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar xzvf foobar.tar.gz</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar tvf foobar.tar</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar xvf foobar.tar</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-checksum"> Q.  And a checksum?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-checksum">And a checksum?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the
 	  file you want to check.  If any of the characters change, the
 	  checksum will no longer be equal to the total, so a simple
 	  comparison will allow you to spot the difference.  (In practice, it
 	  is done in a more complicated way to spot problems like
 	  position-swapping, which will not show up with a simplistic
 	  addition).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I did what you said for <link linkend="ports-cd">compiling
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I did what you said for <link linkend="ports-cd">compiling
 	    ports from a CDROM</link> and it worked great until I tried to
 	  install the kermit port:-</para>
 
@@ -637,38 +662,48 @@ do-install:
 &gt;&gt; Attempting to fetch from ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/.</screen>
 		
 	<para>Why can it not be found? Have I got a dud CDROM?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the
 	  tarball for it on the CDROM, so you will have to fetch it by hand
 	  &mdash; sorry! The reason why you got all those error messages was
 	  because you were not connected to the Internet at the time.  Once
 	  you have downloaded it from any of the sites above, you can re-start
 	  the process (try and choose the nearest site to you, though, to save
 	  your time and the Internet's bandwidth).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I did that, but when I tried to put it into
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I did that, but when I tried to put it into
 	  <filename>/usr/ports/distfiles</filename> I got some error about not
 	  having permission.</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports/distfiles</filename>, but you will not be able
 	  to copy anything there because it is sym-linked to the CDROM, which
 	  is read-only.  You can tell it to look somewhere else by
 	  doing</para>
 	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>make DISTDIR=<replaceable>/where/you/put/it</replaceable> install</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports</filename>? My system administrator says I must
 	  put everything under
 	  <filename>/u/people/guests/wurzburger</filename>, but it does not
 	  seem to work.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  You can use the <makevar>PORTSDIR</makevar> and
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>You can use the <makevar>PORTSDIR</makevar> and
 	  <makevar>PREFIX</makevar> variables to tell the ports mechanism to
 	  use different directories.  For instance,</para>
 	
@@ -693,15 +728,19 @@ do-install:
 	<para>If you do not fancy typing all that in every time you install a
 	  port (and to be honest, who would?), it is a good idea to put these
 	  variables into your environment.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all
 	  the tarballs handy on my system so I do not have to wait for a
 	  download every time I install a port.  Is there an easy way to get
 	  them all at once?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  To get every single tarball for the ports collection,
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>To get every single tarball for the ports collection,
 	  do</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
@@ -714,57 +753,77 @@ do-install:
 	      
 	<para>and for just one port &mdash; well, I think you have guessed
 	  already.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one
 	  of the FreeBSD mirror sites close by.  Is there any way to tell the
 	  port to fetch them from servers other than ones listed in the
 	  MASTER_SITES?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes.  If you know, for example, <hostid
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes.  If you know, for example, <hostid
 	    role="fqdn">ftp.FreeBSD.org</hostid> is much closer than sites
 	  listed in <makevar>MASTER_SITES</makevar>, do as following
 	  example.</para>
 
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports/<replaceable>directory</replaceable></userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE=ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/distfiles/ fetch</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I want to know what files make is going to need before it
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I want to know what files make is going to need before it
 	  tries to pull them down.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  <command>make fetch-list</command> will display a list of
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para><command>make fetch-list</command> will display a list of
 	  the files needed for a port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to
 	  do some hacking on the source before I install it, but it is a bit
 	  tiresome having  to watch it and hit control-C every time.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Doing <command>make extract</command> will stop it after it
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Doing <command>make extract</command> will stop it after it
 	  has fetched and extracted the source code.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to
 	  stop it compiling until I have had a chance to see if my patches
 	  worked properly.  Is there something like <command>make
 	    extract</command>, but for patches?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Yep, <command>make patch</command> is what you want.  You
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yep, <command>make patch</command> is what you want.  You
 	  will probably find the <makevar>PATCH_DEBUG</makevar> option useful
 	  as well.  And by the way, thank you for your efforts!</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is
 	  this true? How can I make sure that I compile ports with the right
 	  settings?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, with version 2.6.3 of <command>gcc</command> (the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, with version 2.6.3 of <command>gcc</command> (the
 	  version shipped with FreeBSD 2.1.0 and 2.1.5), the
 	  <option>-O2</option> option could result in buggy code unless you
 	  used the <option>-fno-strength-reduce</option> option as well.
@@ -772,7 +831,6 @@ do-install:
 	  <emphasis>should</emphasis> be able to specify the compiler options
 	  used by something like</para>
 	      
-	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>make CFLAGS='-O2 -fno-strength-reduce' install</userinput></screen>
 	      
 	<para>or by editing <filename>/etc/make.conf</filename>, but
@@ -781,13 +839,17 @@ do-install:
 	  and inspect the Makefiles by hand, but this can get tedious if the
 	  source has lots of sub-directories, each with their own
 	  Makefiles.</para>
-	    </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want.
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want.
 	  Is there a list anywhere of what ports are available?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Look in the <filename>INDEX</filename> file in
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Look in the <filename>INDEX</filename> file in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports</filename>.  If you would like to search the
 	  ports collection for a keyword, you can do that too.  For example,
 	  you can find ports relevant to the LISP programming language
@@ -795,28 +857,36 @@ do-install:
 
 	<screen>&prompt.user; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>make search key=lisp</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I went to install the <literal>foo</literal> port but the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I went to install the <literal>foo</literal> port but the
 	  system suddenly stopped compiling it and starting compiling the
 	  <literal>bar</literal> port.  What is going on?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  The <literal>foo</literal> port needs something that is
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The <literal>foo</literal> port needs something that is
 	  supplied with <literal>bar</literal> &mdash; for instance, if
 	  <literal>foo</literal> uses graphics, <literal>bar</literal> might
 	  have a library with useful graphics processing routines.  Or
 	  <literal>bar</literal> might be a tool that is needed to compile the
 	  <literal>foo</literal> port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-remove">  Q.  I installed the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-remove">  I installed the
 	  <literal>grizzle</literal> program from the ports and frankly it is
 	  a complete waste of disk space.  I want to delete it but I do not
 	  know where it put all the files.  Any clues?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No problem, just do</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No problem, just do</para>
 		      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>pkg_delete grizzle-6.5</userinput></screen>
 
@@ -824,27 +894,35 @@ do-install:
 
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd <replaceable>/usr/ports/somewhere/grizzle</replaceable></userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make deinstall</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
 	<para>
-	  Q.  Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use
+	  Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use
 	  that command.  You do not seriously expect me to remember that, do
 	  you??</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Not at all, you can find it out by doing</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Not at all, you can find it out by doing</para>
 	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>pkg_info -a | grep grizzle</userinput>
 Information for grizzle-6.5:
 grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arcade game.</screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be
 	  taking up an awful lot of room.  Is it safe to go in there and
 	  delete things?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly
 	  certain you will not need the source again, there is no point in
 	  keeping it hanging around.  The best way to do this is</para>
 	      
@@ -853,44 +931,60 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 		      
 	<para>which will go through all the ports subdirectories and delete
 	  everything except the skeletons for each port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or
 	  whatever you called them in the <filename>distfiles</filename>
 	  directory.  Can I delete those as well?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can
 	  go as well.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is
 	  there any way of installing all the ports in one go?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Just do</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Just do</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make install</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long
 	  time so I went to bed and left it to get on with it.  When I looked
 	  at the computer this morning, it had only done three and a half
 	  ports.  Did something go wrong?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you
 	  questions that we cannot answer for you (eg &ldquo;Do you want to
 	  print on A4 or US letter sized paper?&rdquo;) and they need to have
 	  someone on hand to answer them.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I really do not want to spend all day staring at the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I really do not want to spend all day staring at the
 	  monitor.  Any better ideas?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local
 	  park:-</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
@@ -903,15 +997,19 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make -DIS_INTERACTIVE install</userinput></screen>
 	      
 	<para>to finish the job.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  At work, we are using <literal>frobble</literal>, which is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>At work, we are using <literal>frobble</literal>, which is
 	  in your ports collection, but we have altered it quite a bit to get
 	  it to do what we need.  Is there any way of making our own packages,
 	  so we can distribute it more easily around our sites?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your
 	  changes:-</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd <replaceable>/usr/ports/somewhere/frobble</replaceable></userinput>
@@ -920,24 +1018,27 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 [Apply your patches]
 &prompt.root; <userinput>cd ../..</userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make package</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  This ports stuff is really clever.  I am desperate to find
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>This ports stuff is really clever.  I am desperate to find
 	  out how you did it.  What is the secret?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the
 	  <filename>bsd.ports.mk</filename> and
 	  <filename>bsd.ports.subdir.mk</filename> files in your <ulink
 	    URL="file://localhost/usr/ports/Mk/">makefiles
 	    directory.</ulink></para>
 
-	<note>
 	  <para>Readers with an aversion to intricate shell-scripts are
 	    advised not to follow this link...)</para>
-	</note>
-      </listitem>
-    </itemizedlist>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
+    </qandaset>
   </sect1>
   
   <sect1 id="porting">
@@ -4674,6 +4775,6 @@ pre-install:
      sgml-indent-data: t
      sgml-omittag: nil 
      sgml-always-quote-attributes: t 
-     sgml-parent-document: ("../handbook.sgml" "part" "chapter")
+     sgml-parent-document: ("../book.sgml" "part" "chapter")
      End: 
 -->
diff --git a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml b/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml
index 98edea5052..0a9fed2742 100644
--- a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml
+++ b/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
 <!--
      The FreeBSD Documentation Project
 
-     $Id: book.sgml,v 1.44 1999-08-18 18:58:10 nik Exp $
+     $Id: book.sgml,v 1.45 1999-08-23 21:06:02 nik Exp $
 -->
-
+  
 <chapter id="ports">
   <title>Installing Applications: The Ports collection</title>
   
@@ -513,31 +513,42 @@ do-install:
   <sect1>
     <title>Some Questions and Answers</title>
     
-    <itemizedlist>
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I thought this was going to be a discussion about
+    <qandaset>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I thought this was going to be a discussion about
 	  modems??!</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Ah.  You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Ah.  You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of
 	  your computer.  We are using &ldquo;port&rdquo; here to mean the
 	  result of &ldquo;porting&rdquo; a program from one version of Unix
 	  to another.  (It is an unfortunate bad habit of computer people to
 	  use the same word to refer to several completely different
 	  things).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
 	  programs?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing
 	  it.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  So why bother with ports then?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Several reasons:-</para>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>So why bother with ports then?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Several reasons:-</para>
 	
 	<orderedlist>
 	  <listitem>
@@ -576,24 +587,32 @@ do-install:
 	      -->;-)</para>
 	  </listitem>
 	</orderedlist>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-patch"> Q.  What is a patch?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-patch"> What is a patch?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go
 	  from one version of a file to another.  It contains text that says,
 	  in effect, things like &ldquo;delete line 23&rdquo;, &ldquo;add
 	  these two lines after line 468&rdquo; or &ldquo;change line 197 to
 	  this&rdquo;.  Also known as a &ldquo;diff&rdquo;, since it is
 	  generated by a program of that name.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-tarball"> Q.  What is all this about
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-tarball"> What is all this about
 	  tarballs?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  It is a file ending in <filename>.tar</filename> or
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>It is a file ending in <filename>.tar</filename> or
 	  <filename>.tar.gz</filename> (with variations like
 	  <filename>.tar.Z</filename>, or even <filename>.tgz</filename> if
 	  you are trying to squeeze the names into a DOS filesystem).</para>
@@ -613,22 +632,28 @@ do-install:
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar xzvf foobar.tar.gz</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar tvf foobar.tar</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>tar xvf foobar.tar</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-checksum"> Q.  And a checksum?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-checksum">And a checksum?</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the
 	  file you want to check.  If any of the characters change, the
 	  checksum will no longer be equal to the total, so a simple
 	  comparison will allow you to spot the difference.  (In practice, it
 	  is done in a more complicated way to spot problems like
 	  position-swapping, which will not show up with a simplistic
 	  addition).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I did what you said for <link linkend="ports-cd">compiling
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I did what you said for <link linkend="ports-cd">compiling
 	    ports from a CDROM</link> and it worked great until I tried to
 	  install the kermit port:-</para>
 
@@ -637,38 +662,48 @@ do-install:
 &gt;&gt; Attempting to fetch from ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/.</screen>
 		
 	<para>Why can it not be found? Have I got a dud CDROM?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the
 	  tarball for it on the CDROM, so you will have to fetch it by hand
 	  &mdash; sorry! The reason why you got all those error messages was
 	  because you were not connected to the Internet at the time.  Once
 	  you have downloaded it from any of the sites above, you can re-start
 	  the process (try and choose the nearest site to you, though, to save
 	  your time and the Internet's bandwidth).</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I did that, but when I tried to put it into
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I did that, but when I tried to put it into
 	  <filename>/usr/ports/distfiles</filename> I got some error about not
 	  having permission.</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports/distfiles</filename>, but you will not be able
 	  to copy anything there because it is sym-linked to the CDROM, which
 	  is read-only.  You can tell it to look somewhere else by
 	  doing</para>
 	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>make DISTDIR=<replaceable>/where/you/put/it</replaceable> install</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports</filename>? My system administrator says I must
 	  put everything under
 	  <filename>/u/people/guests/wurzburger</filename>, but it does not
 	  seem to work.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  You can use the <makevar>PORTSDIR</makevar> and
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>You can use the <makevar>PORTSDIR</makevar> and
 	  <makevar>PREFIX</makevar> variables to tell the ports mechanism to
 	  use different directories.  For instance,</para>
 	
@@ -693,15 +728,19 @@ do-install:
 	<para>If you do not fancy typing all that in every time you install a
 	  port (and to be honest, who would?), it is a good idea to put these
 	  variables into your environment.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all
 	  the tarballs handy on my system so I do not have to wait for a
 	  download every time I install a port.  Is there an easy way to get
 	  them all at once?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  To get every single tarball for the ports collection,
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>To get every single tarball for the ports collection,
 	  do</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
@@ -714,57 +753,77 @@ do-install:
 	      
 	<para>and for just one port &mdash; well, I think you have guessed
 	  already.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one
 	  of the FreeBSD mirror sites close by.  Is there any way to tell the
 	  port to fetch them from servers other than ones listed in the
 	  MASTER_SITES?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes.  If you know, for example, <hostid
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes.  If you know, for example, <hostid
 	    role="fqdn">ftp.FreeBSD.org</hostid> is much closer than sites
 	  listed in <makevar>MASTER_SITES</makevar>, do as following
 	  example.</para>
 
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports/<replaceable>directory</replaceable></userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE=ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/distfiles/ fetch</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I want to know what files make is going to need before it
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I want to know what files make is going to need before it
 	  tries to pull them down.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  <command>make fetch-list</command> will display a list of
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para><command>make fetch-list</command> will display a list of
 	  the files needed for a port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to
 	  do some hacking on the source before I install it, but it is a bit
 	  tiresome having  to watch it and hit control-C every time.</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Doing <command>make extract</command> will stop it after it
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Doing <command>make extract</command> will stop it after it
 	  has fetched and extracted the source code.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to
 	  stop it compiling until I have had a chance to see if my patches
 	  worked properly.  Is there something like <command>make
 	    extract</command>, but for patches?</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Yep, <command>make patch</command> is what you want.  You
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yep, <command>make patch</command> is what you want.  You
 	  will probably find the <makevar>PATCH_DEBUG</makevar> option useful
 	  as well.  And by the way, thank you for your efforts!</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is
 	  this true? How can I make sure that I compile ports with the right
 	  settings?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, with version 2.6.3 of <command>gcc</command> (the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, with version 2.6.3 of <command>gcc</command> (the
 	  version shipped with FreeBSD 2.1.0 and 2.1.5), the
 	  <option>-O2</option> option could result in buggy code unless you
 	  used the <option>-fno-strength-reduce</option> option as well.
@@ -772,7 +831,6 @@ do-install:
 	  <emphasis>should</emphasis> be able to specify the compiler options
 	  used by something like</para>
 	      
-	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>make CFLAGS='-O2 -fno-strength-reduce' install</userinput></screen>
 	      
 	<para>or by editing <filename>/etc/make.conf</filename>, but
@@ -781,13 +839,17 @@ do-install:
 	  and inspect the Makefiles by hand, but this can get tedious if the
 	  source has lots of sub-directories, each with their own
 	  Makefiles.</para>
-	    </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want.
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want.
 	  Is there a list anywhere of what ports are available?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Look in the <filename>INDEX</filename> file in
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Look in the <filename>INDEX</filename> file in
 	  <filename>/usr/ports</filename>.  If you would like to search the
 	  ports collection for a keyword, you can do that too.  For example,
 	  you can find ports relevant to the LISP programming language
@@ -795,28 +857,36 @@ do-install:
 
 	<screen>&prompt.user; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
 &prompt.user; <userinput>make search key=lisp</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I went to install the <literal>foo</literal> port but the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I went to install the <literal>foo</literal> port but the
 	  system suddenly stopped compiling it and starting compiling the
 	  <literal>bar</literal> port.  What is going on?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  The <literal>foo</literal> port needs something that is
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>The <literal>foo</literal> port needs something that is
 	  supplied with <literal>bar</literal> &mdash; for instance, if
 	  <literal>foo</literal> uses graphics, <literal>bar</literal> might
 	  have a library with useful graphics processing routines.  Or
 	  <literal>bar</literal> might be a tool that is needed to compile the
 	  <literal>foo</literal> port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para><anchor id="ports-remove">  Q.  I installed the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para id="ports-remove">  I installed the
 	  <literal>grizzle</literal> program from the ports and frankly it is
 	  a complete waste of disk space.  I want to delete it but I do not
 	  know where it put all the files.  Any clues?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No problem, just do</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No problem, just do</para>
 		      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>pkg_delete grizzle-6.5</userinput></screen>
 
@@ -824,27 +894,35 @@ do-install:
 
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd <replaceable>/usr/ports/somewhere/grizzle</replaceable></userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make deinstall</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
 	<para>
-	  Q.  Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use
+	  Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use
 	  that command.  You do not seriously expect me to remember that, do
 	  you??</para>
-	
-	<para>A.  Not at all, you can find it out by doing</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Not at all, you can find it out by doing</para>
 	
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>pkg_info -a | grep grizzle</userinput>
 Information for grizzle-6.5:
 grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arcade game.</screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be
 	  taking up an awful lot of room.  Is it safe to go in there and
 	  delete things?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly
 	  certain you will not need the source again, there is no point in
 	  keeping it hanging around.  The best way to do this is</para>
 	      
@@ -853,44 +931,60 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 		      
 	<para>which will go through all the ports subdirectories and delete
 	  everything except the skeletons for each port.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or
 	  whatever you called them in the <filename>distfiles</filename>
 	  directory.  Can I delete those as well?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can
 	  go as well.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is
 	  there any way of installing all the ports in one go?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Just do</para>
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Just do</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make install</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long
 	  time so I went to bed and left it to get on with it.  When I looked
 	  at the computer this morning, it had only done three and a half
 	  ports.  Did something go wrong?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you
 	  questions that we cannot answer for you (eg &ldquo;Do you want to
 	  print on A4 or US letter sized paper?&rdquo;) and they need to have
 	  someone on hand to answer them.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  I really do not want to spend all day staring at the
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>I really do not want to spend all day staring at the
 	  monitor.  Any better ideas?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local
 	  park:-</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root <userinput>cd /usr/ports</userinput>
@@ -903,15 +997,19 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make -DIS_INTERACTIVE install</userinput></screen>
 	      
 	<para>to finish the job.</para>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
       
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  At work, we are using <literal>frobble</literal>, which is
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>At work, we are using <literal>frobble</literal>, which is
 	  in your ports collection, but we have altered it quite a bit to get
 	  it to do what we need.  Is there any way of making our own packages,
 	  so we can distribute it more easily around our sites?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your
 	  changes:-</para>
 	      
 	<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd <replaceable>/usr/ports/somewhere/frobble</replaceable></userinput>
@@ -920,24 +1018,27 @@ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arc
 [Apply your patches]
 &prompt.root; <userinput>cd ../..</userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make package</userinput></screen>
-      </listitem>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
 	    
-      <listitem>
-	<para>Q.  This ports stuff is really clever.  I am desperate to find
+      <qandaentry>
+	<question>
+	<para>This ports stuff is really clever.  I am desperate to find
 	  out how you did it.  What is the secret?</para>
-	      
-	<para>A.  Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the
+	</question>
+
+	<answer>
+	<para>Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the
 	  <filename>bsd.ports.mk</filename> and
 	  <filename>bsd.ports.subdir.mk</filename> files in your <ulink
 	    URL="file://localhost/usr/ports/Mk/">makefiles
 	    directory.</ulink></para>
 
-	<note>
 	  <para>Readers with an aversion to intricate shell-scripts are
 	    advised not to follow this link...)</para>
-	</note>
-      </listitem>
-    </itemizedlist>
+	</answer>
+      </qandaentry>
+    </qandaset>
   </sect1>
   
   <sect1 id="porting">
@@ -4674,6 +4775,6 @@ pre-install:
      sgml-indent-data: t
      sgml-omittag: nil 
      sgml-always-quote-attributes: t 
-     sgml-parent-document: ("../handbook.sgml" "part" "chapter")
+     sgml-parent-document: ("../book.sgml" "part" "chapter")
      End: 
 -->