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Diffstat (limited to 'kdoctools/docbook/xsl/params/make.index.markup.xml')
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diff --git a/kdoctools/docbook/xsl/params/make.index.markup.xml b/kdoctools/docbook/xsl/params/make.index.markup.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..eec982b36 --- /dev/null +++ b/kdoctools/docbook/xsl/params/make.index.markup.xml @@ -0,0 +1,68 @@ +<refentry id="make.index.markup"> +<refmeta> +<refentrytitle>make.index.markup</refentrytitle> +<refmiscinfo role="type">boolean</refmiscinfo> +</refmeta> +<refnamediv> +<refname>make.index.markup</refname> +<refpurpose>Generate XML index markup in the index?</refpurpose> +</refnamediv> + +<refsynopsisdiv> +<src:fragment id='make.index.markup.frag'> +<xsl:param name="make.index.markup" select="0"/> +</src:fragment> +</refsynopsisdiv> + +<refsect1><title>Description</title> + +<para>This parameter enables a very neat trick for getting properly +merged, collated back-of-the-book indexes. G. Ken Holman suggested +this trick at Extreme Markup Languages 2002 and I'm indebted to him +for it.</para> + +<para>Jeni Tennison's excellent code in +<filename>autoidx.xsl</filename> does a great job of merging and +sorting <sgmltag>indexterm</sgmltag>s in the document and building a +back-of-the-book index. However, there's one thing that it cannot +reasonably be expected to do: merge page numbers into ranges. (I would +not have thought that it could collate and suppress duplicate page +numbers, but in fact it appears to manage that task somehow.)</para> + +<para>Ken's trick is to produce a document in which the index at the +back of the book is <quote>displayed</quote> in XML. Because the index +is generated by the FO processor, all of the page numbers have been resolved. +It's a bit hard to explain, but what it boils down to is that instead of having +an index at the back of the book that looks like this:</para> + +<blockquote> +<formalpara><title>A</title> +<para>ap1, 1, 2, 3</para> +</formalpara> +</blockquote> + +<para>you get one that looks like this:</para> + +<blockquote> +<programlisting><![CDATA[<indexdiv>A</indexdiv> +<indexentry> +<primaryie>ap1</primaryie>, +<phrase role="pageno">1</phrase>, +<phrase role="pageno">2</phrase>, +<phrase role="pageno">3</phrase> +</indexentry>]]></programlisting> +</blockquote> + +<para>After building a PDF file with this sort of odd-looking index, you can +extract the text from the PDF file and the result is a proper index expressed in +XML.</para> + +<para>Now you have data that's amenable to processing and a simple Perl script +(such as <filename>fo/pdf2index</filename>) can +merge page ranges and generate a proper index.</para> + +<para>Finally, reformat your original document using this literal index instead of +an automatically generated one and <quote>bingo</quote>!</para> + +</refsect1> +</refentry> |