Hi,
I haven't tried this yet, but would like to know in advance what
behaviour I could expect:
I want to make SVG images that are large and span multiple pages (large
diagrams). Then I want to convert the SVG to PDF so that the image spans
multiple pages in the PDF document where each page is
Hello,
I need Hyphenation Patterns for german and french language. These are not
available at the fop-homepage, but a reference to a tex source. Its mentioned
that its possible to convert the tex-format to the fop xml-format. I tried
really hard to find out how to do this, but I got no idea.
Evert Hoff wrote:
Hi,
I haven't tried this yet, but would like to know in advance what
behaviour I could expect:
I want to make SVG images that are large and span multiple pages (large
diagrams). Then I want to convert the SVG to PDF so that the image spans
multiple pages in the PDF document
Waggershauser, Thomas wrote:
Hello,
I need Hyphenation Patterns for german and french language. These are not
available at the fop-homepage, but a reference to a tex source. Its mentioned
that its possible to convert the tex-format to the fop xml-format. I tried
really hard to find out how to
Hi List,
I m trying to set up a table out of elements which are all almost the same.
There are only two indicators to determine to which position in the table a
element fits.
1. All elements with the same value in X/ belong to one table.
2. All elements with the same value in Y/ belong to one
On Mar 25, 2004, at 1:39 AM, Chris Bowditch wrote:
Waggershauser, Thomas wrote:
Hello,
I need Hyphenation Patterns for german and french language. These are
not available at the fop-homepage, but a reference to a tex source.
Its mentioned that its possible to convert the tex-format to the fop
Jan,
On Mar 25, 2004, at 5:35 AM, Jan Kohnert wrote:
I wonder how I can change a table-row while processing data.
Does anybody has an Idea?
Thanks in advance!
This question is more appropriate for the XSLT Mulberry list[1]. When
you ask, you probably want to include a portion of the XML itself,