Hi Bob & Jirka
Thanks for this. Bit late in saying so.
But I am using this customization on a document I am working with,
presently, and it does the trick. Thanks again.


On Tue, Jul 23, 2013 at 1:47 PM, Bob Stayton <b...@sagehill.net> wrote:

> I seem to recall that Framemaker's HTML output used something simple like
> this for the link text:
>
> cat, [1]
> dog, [1], [2], [3], [4]
> egret, [1], [2]
>
> This is easily achieved in DocBook XSL by customizing this template from
> autoidx.xsl:
>
>   <xsl:template match="indexterm" mode="reference">
>
> by replacing how the "title" variable is computed in that template with
> this:
>
>        <xsl:variable name="title">
>              <xsl:text>[</xsl:text>
>              <xsl:value-of select="$position"/>
>              <xsl:text>]</xsl:text>
>        </xsl:variable>
>
> Here the $position value was passed to the template as a parameter, giving
> it the position in the list of links for that indexterm.  If you are using
> zones in your indexterms, there are a couple of other templates you will
> need to customize as well.
>
> If you want to pursue your c1s3p7 scheme, the context node for this
> template is the indexterm in its location in the text.  To get the number
> of its chapter, for example, you could use something like this within the
> template:
>
>   <xsl:apply-templates select="ancestor::d:chapter[1]"
> mode="label.markup"/>
>
> When customizing index templates, your customization layer will usually
> need to incorporate the entity declarations that are used in most of the
> index templates.  See the top of the autoidx.xsl file to see how to do that.
>
> Bob Stayton
> Sagehill Enterprises
> b...@sagehill.net
>
>
> From: Pc Thoms
> Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2013 5:57 AM
>
> To: Bob Stayton
> Cc: Jirka Kosek ; docbook-apps@lists.oasis-open.org
> Subject: Re: [docbook-apps] Generating e-pub and html indexes
>
>
> Hi Paul
> You are right about my desire to change the appearance of the locator in
> the generated index. I would prefer a locator like a page number.
> I understand that the locators generated in html, etc., give the context
> of the <indexterm/>. However, I would prefer a locator such as
> c1s3p7 (chapter one, section 3, paragraph 7), or c4t3 (chapter four, table
> 3), if not the exact locator given in an equivalent pdf file. Or, each
> locator might be given a sequential number. I am looking for a simply link
> in an index than the chapter title.
> With thanks
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Jul 23, 2013 at 4:12 AM, Bob Stayton <b...@sagehill.net> wrote:
>
> Hi Paul,
> I misunderstood what you meant by locator.  As you said in your earlier
> mail, setting the stylesheet parameter 'index.links.to.section' to a value
> of  zero creates an href that sends the link directly to the point in the
> text where the indexterm was located.  I don't think you can get any more
> specific than that.  So I think your last paragraph is satisfied.
>
> The hot link text displayed in the index is still the section title, even
> though the link lands at the specific point.  I thought you wanted to
> change the hot text, from the section title to something like a page
> number, so I was asking about an example of what you want the hot text to
> say instead of the section title, given that page numbers don't exist in
> HTML output.
>
> Bob Stayton
> Sagehill Enterprises
> b...@sagehill.net
>
>
> From: Pc Thoms
> Sent: Monday, July 22, 2013 5:02 PM
> To: Bob Stayton
> Cc: Jirka Kosek ; docbook-apps@lists.oasis-open.org
> Subject: Re: [docbook-apps] Generating e-pub and html indexes
>
>
> A specific example I should not provide, as it is beyond my expertise, but
> I have expectations and hopes for such. I am fairly competent in xml, but
> not with xslt.
>
>
> If the locators in a DocBook formatted xml file can point to the
> <chapter/>, <section>, <para/>, <table/>, etc., within the document, the
> more specific the reference between the locator and the origination of the
> <indexterm/> so much the better. Preferably the generated locator will
> point directly to the originating <indexterm/> placed in the document, or
> the lowest hierarchical block element. Rather than linking to the
> <chapter/>, which may contain hundreds, to thousands, of words it would be
> better to link to the lowest hierarchical block element that contains the
> <indexterm/>, such as a <para/> or <line/> (DocBook-Publisher).
> This should make the an <index/> locator link directly to specific place
> in the text, that one would presumably be interested in once they click a
> link.
> Locators that link to the beginning of a <chapter/> or <section/> that may
> contain 500+ words is not very useful. But a locator that links one
> directly to the <section>, <para/>, <table/>, or <line/>, would serve its’
> readers well.
>
>
> What I’m looking for is an index locator that has an “href” attribute that
> links directly to an anchored point in an XHTML and E-Pub document.
> Any assistance, and direction, is appreciated.
>
> Paul
>

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