This repository has been archived on 2023-08-20. You can view files and clone it, but cannot push or open issues or pull requests.
yap-6.3/Logtalk/xml/NOTES

162 lines
6.1 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

=================================================================
Logtalk - Object oriented extension to Prolog
Release 2.19.0
Copyright (c) 1998-2004 Paulo Moura. All Rights Reserved.
=================================================================
This folder contains several files that enables .xml documentation files
created when compiling objects, categories, or protocols, to be converted
to PDF files, to be viewed in a web browser that supports the W3C standards
XML, XSLT, CSS, and HTML 4 or XHTML 1.0, or to be converted to LateX for
printing.
You will need to either copy your .xml files to this directory or copy
these files to the directory where the .xml files reside.
Regarding conversion to HTML/XHTML, the links to the .xsl files on the
.xml files and the links to the .css files in the generated .html files
assume that all files reside in the same directory.
The choice of the default .xsl file to use is made in the config files by
the '$lgt_default_flag'/2 predicate. You can also choose a different
.xsl file by using the xsl/1 compiler option in the logtalk_compile/2 or
logtalk_load/2 calls. The default file is lgtxml.xsl (described below).
The .xml documenting files can be either generated as standalone XML files
or contain a reference to either the Logtalk DTD file, logtalk.dtd, or to
the Logtalk XML Schema file, logtalk.xsd. The reference to the XML
specification file can be either a local reference or a URI reference. By
default, all .xml documenting files contain a local reference but that
can be changed either in the config files, by setting a Logtalk compiler
flag, or by using the doctype/1 compiler option. Choose the option value
that works best for your XSLT tools. To choose between the .dtd or .xsd
specifications use the xmlspec/1 compiler option.
Brief description of each file in this folder:
lgthtml.xsl
XSLT file to output HTML files from the .xml files. The links in the
generated HTML files point to related HTML files. It can be used to
batch convert XML files to HTML files. UTF-8 encoding is assumed. Edit
the file if you use a different encoding.
lgtxml.xsl
XSLT file for viewing .xml files directly in in a browser such as Mozilla
(version 0.9.2 or later) or Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.5 for Windows
(after installing the latest Microsoft XML Parser Release that is needed
for XSL standard compliance). The links in the (internally generated)
HTML files point to related XML files. UTF-8 encoding is assumed. Edit
the file if you use a different encoding.
lgtxhtml.xsl
XSLT file to output XHTML 1.0 files from the .xml files. The links in
the generated XHTML files point to related XHTML files. It can be used
to batch convert XML files to XHTML files. UTF-8 encoding is assumed.
Edit the file if you use a different encoding.
lgtpdfa4.xsl
lgtpdfus.xsl
XSLT files to generate PDF files from the .xml files (formatted either
for A4 paper or US Letter paper) using XSL Formatting Objects. Tested
with the XSL:FO processors Apache FOP 0.20.5 (http://xml.apache.org/fop),
PassiveTeX 1.21 (http://www.tei-c.org.uk/Software/passivetex/), and
RenderX 2.77 (http://www.renderx.com/).
texml.xsl
XSLT file to output TeXML files that can be further processed by
TeXMLatte to produce LaTeX files. The TeXMLatte program can be found
at: http://www.alphaworks.ibm.com/tech/texml/.
ie50.xsl
XSLT file for viewing .xml files in Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.x
(using the outdated Microsoft XML Parser; works with both Macintosh
and Windows versions). The links in the (internally generated) HTML
files point to related XML files. It can be used to browse and view
the XML files directly.
logtalk.dtd
Document type description describing the structure of the .xml files
generated by Logtalk.
logtalk.xsd
XML Schema describing the structure of the .xml files generated by
Logtalk.
logtalk.css
Cascade style sheet file to render the HTML/XHTML output of the .xsl
files in a web browser.
html.sh
Sample Unix shell script to batch convert .xml files to .html files.
The script also generates an index.html file which contains links to all the
converted files. The title of the index.html file can be given as a parameter
to the script. Edit the script to match your environment before running it
and to chose between HTML or XHTML output. Requires James Clarck XT XSLT
processor 20020426a or later version (http://www.jclark.com/xml/).
htmlnt.cmd
Sample Windows NT batch script to convert .xml files to .html files.
The script also generates an index.html file that contains links to all
converted files. The title of the index.html can be given as a parameter
to the script. Edit the script to match your environment before running
it and to chose between HTML or XHTML output. Requires James Clarck XT
XSLT processor 20020426a or later version (http://www.jclark.com/xml/).
htmldos.bat
Sample DOS batch script to convert .xml files to .html files. Edit the
script to match your environment before running it and to chose between
HTML or XHTML output. Requires James Clarck XT XSLT processor 20020426a
or later version (http://www.jclark.com/xml/).
pdf.sh
Sample Unix shell script to batch convert .xml files to .pdf files.
Edit the script to match your environment and paper format preference
before running it. Requires Apache FOP processor (http://xml.apache.org/fop).
Tested with version 0.20.5 (to workaround a bug on the XALAN processor used
by FOP, you should use the compiler option doctype(standalone) when compiling
your Logtalk source files).
pdf.bat
Sample DOS batch script to convert .xml files to .pdf files.
Edit the script to match your environment and paper format preference
before running it. Requires Apache FOP processor (http://xml.apache.org/fop).
Tested with version 0.20.5 (to workaround a bug on the XALAN processor used
by FOP, you should use the compiler option doctype(standalone) when compiling
your Logtalk source files).
Note that you can write other XSLT files for converting the XML files to
other formats besides PDF, HTML, or LaTeX. You can also write alternative
CSS and XSLT files to change the appearance of the HTML and LaTeX files.