Index: openacs-4/packages/acs-core-docs/www/docbook-primer.html =================================================================== RCS file: /usr/local/cvsroot/openacs-4/packages/acs-core-docs/www/docbook-primer.html,v diff -u -r1.56.2.10 -r1.56.2.11 --- openacs-4/packages/acs-core-docs/www/docbook-primer.html 2 Sep 2024 09:40:21 -0000 1.56.2.10 +++ openacs-4/packages/acs-core-docs/www/docbook-primer.html 3 Sep 2024 08:43:02 -0000 1.56.2.11 @@ -578,7 +578,7 @@ DTD. The remaining discussion is about publishing using Docbook.
- + is a publishing standard based on XML with similar goals to the OpenACS Documentation project. Some specific reasons why we are using DocBook:
@@ -640,7 +640,7 @@ list of elements and use more exotic features in your documents. The list is made up of SGML-elements but basically the same elements are valid in the XML DTD as long as you remember to: - +
Always close your tags with corresponding end-tags and to not use other tag minimization @@ -689,7 +689,7 @@ The documentation for each package will make up a little "book" that is structured like this - examples are emphasized: - +
book : Docs for one package - templating @@ -713,20 +713,20 @@ sources of these DocBook documents to get an idea of how they are tied together.
-
+
Given that your job starts at the sect1
-level, all your documents should open with a
<sect1>
-tag and end
with the corresponding </sect1>
.
-
+
You need to feed every <sect1>
two attributes. The first attribute,
id
, is standard and can be used with all elements. It comes in very
handy when interlinking between documents (more about this when talking about links in the section called “Links”).
The value of id
has to be unique
throughout the book you're making since the id
's in your
sect1
's will turn into filenames when the book is parsed into HTML.
-
+
The other attribute is xreflabel
. The value of this is the text that will appear
as the link when referring to this sect1
.
@@ -741,7 +741,7 @@ </sect1>
-
+
Inside this container your document will be split up into
<sect2>
's,
each with the same requirements - id
and xreflabel
@@ -750,7 +750,7 @@
When it comes to naming your
sect2
's and below, prefix them with some abbreviation of the id
in the sect1
such as requirements-overview
.
-
+
For displaying a snippet of code, a filename or anything else you just want to appear as a part of
a sentence, we use
<computeroutput>
@@ -768,12 +768,12 @@
tag around text that has been wrapped by combinations of <computeroutput>
and <userinput>
- + Linking falls into two different categories: inside the book you're making and outside:
By having unique id
's you can cross-reference any part of your book
with a simple tag, regardless of where that part is.
-
Check out how I link to a subsection of the Developer's Guide:
Put this in your XML:
+Check out how I link to a subsection of the Developer's Guide:
Put this in your XML:
- Find information about creating a package in <xref linkend="packages-making-a-package"></xref>.And the output is:
@@ -797,7 +797,7 @@packages-looks
, the parser will try its best to explain where the link takes you.
- + If you're hyper-linking out of the documentation, it works almost the same way as HTML - the tag is just a little different @@ -818,7 +818,7 @@ for you.
-
+
To insert a graphic we use the elements
<mediaobject>
,
<imageobject>
,
@@ -844,7 +844,7 @@
Put your graphics in a separate directory ("images") and link to them
only with relative paths.
- + Here's how you make the DocBook equivalent of the three usual HTML-lists:
Making an unordered list is pretty much like doing the same thing in HTML - if you close your <li>
, that is. The only differences are that each list item has to be wrapped in something more, such as
@@ -889,7 +889,7 @@
</variablelist>
-
+
DocBook supports several types of tables, but in most cases, the
<informaltable>
is enough:
@@ -926,7 +926,7 @@
<table>
for an example.
-
+
Our documentation uses two flavors of emphasis - italics and bold type. DocBook uses one -
<emphasis>
.