On Wed, 30 May 2007 14:47:41 -0400 Rob Landley wrote: > On Wednesday 30 May 2007 12:18 am, Randy Dunlap wrote: > > What is <\p> supposed to do? > > Sorry, typo. Should be </p> instead. My bad. > > As to what it does in a larger sense, "make the xml people happy". Closing > parentheses tags make the various xhtml validators shut up. The main > difference between xhtml and html is that you close all the tags you open. I > can yank it if people prefer it that way. > > > Here's what I see in index.html (beginning lines of it): > > > > Linux Kernel HTML Documentation > > Kernel Version: 2.6.22-rc3 > > > > deviceiobookBus-Independent Device Accesses <\p> > > Yeah, that's screwed up. (It looked fine in Konqueror. :) *rummage*... > > Here's an updated patch. This time I checked that it looked ok in Firefox > too:
Yes, /me too. Thanks. I still disagree on the use of "nochunks" though. > --- git/Documentation/DocBook/Makefile 2007-05-23 16:36:56.000000000 > -0400 > +++ work/Documentation/DocBook/Makefile 2007-05-30 14:36:49.000000000 > -0400 > @@ -141,9 +141,12 @@ > cat $(HTML) >> $(main_idx) > > quiet_cmd_db2html = HTML $@ > - cmd_db2html = xmlto xhtml $(XMLTOFLAGS) -o $(patsubst %.html,%,$@) $< > && \ > - echo '<a HREF="$(patsubst %.html,%,$(notdir $@))/index.html"> \ > - $(patsubst %.html,%,$(notdir $@))</a><p>' > $@ > + cmd_db2html = xmlto xhtml-nochunks $(XMLTOFLAGS) -o $(patsubst > %.html,%,$@) $< && \ > + NAME='$(patsubst %.html,%,$(notdir $@))'; \ > + echo -n "<p><a HREF=\"$$NAME/$$NAME.html\">$$NAME</a> - " >$@; \ > + sed -nre '[EMAIL PROTECTED]<title>(.*)</title>[EMAIL > PROTECTED]@p' \ > + "Documentation/DocBook/$$NAME/$$NAME.html" >> $@ ; \ > + echo '</p>' >> $@ > > %.html: %.xml > @(which xmlto > /dev/null 2>&1) || \ > > Rob --- ~Randy *** Remember to use Documentation/SubmitChecklist when testing your code *** - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/