On Thu, 07 Feb 2008 18:33:26 +0200, AlChuck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
There is a way, it's described in Bob Stayton's DocBook XSL - The
Complete Guide:
http://www.sagehill.net/docbookxsl/PageDesign.html
I've read this. I looked at it again, and I still could not figure out a
way to use
I'm about to start some additional documentation about using
and building website.
I'm tempted to port the schema to relax / docbook v5
and document it based on that.
Any opinions/preferences please?
regards
--
Dave Pawson
XSLT XSL-FO FAQ.
http://www.dpawson.co.uk
Hi Dave,
speaking for http://www.neodoc.biz we use V5 for all our new projects
since many monthes now, and are now migrating old v4 to v5, since v5 is
now (almost?) official :-)
Schemas offer greater flexibility (though SGML entities might miss to
some) and tools support is great.
Finally DTD
relax / docbook v5 is the only way to go.
I'm about to start some additional documentation about using
and building website.
I'm tempted to port the schema to relax / docbook v5
and document it based on that.
Any opinions/preferences please?
regards
--
Dave Pawson
XSLT XSL-FO FAQ.
Dave
I'll see if I can check it out - then link
it through to the most recent rng schema of docbook 5
that Norm released.
Coincidentally, I've been working on pretty much the same
thing and have a working, though fragile, attempt at doing
exactly this. If you'd like, I can share it with
Ron Catterall wrote:
relax / docbook v5 is the only way to go.
Thanks Ron, Camil.
In my most recent website schema there is a relax NG version.
The last change is
2005-04-18 Michael Smith
I'll see if I can check it out - then link
it through to the most recent rng schema of docbook 5
that
Hi Dave,
I'm pretty much a general user of the website DTD. The kind of documents I
tried to find a while ago when I put my website together using the website
DTD were straightforward examples and how-to guides. Not so much the
technical stuff because, generally speaking, I like things to