HTML Parameter Reference
$Id: param.xml,v 1.2 2002-09-13 22:40:29 cjones Exp $
WalshNorman199920002001Norman WalshIntroductionThis is technical reference documentation for the DocBook XSL
Stylesheets; it documents (some of) the parameters, templates, and
other elements of the stylesheets.This reference describes each of the HTML Stylesheet parameters.
These are the easily customizable parts of the stylesheet.
If you want to specify an alternate value for one or more of these
parameters, you can do so in a driver stylesheet.For example, if you want to change the html.stylesheet
to reference.css, you might create a driver
stylesheet like this:<xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
version='1.0'>
<xsl:import href="http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/snapshot/html/docbook.xsl"/>
<xsl:param name="html.stylesheet">reference.css</xsl:param>
</xsl:stylesheet>Naturally, you have to change the
href attribute on
<xsl:import> to point to
docbook.xsl on your system. (Or
chunk.xsl, if you're using chunking.)This is not intended to be user documentation.
It is provided for developers writing customization layers for the
stylesheets, and for anyone who's interested in how it
works.Although I am trying to be thorough, this documentation is known
to be incomplete. Don't forget to read the source, too :-)Admonitionsadmon.graphics.extensionstringadmon.graphics.extensionExtension for admonition graphics<xsl:param name="admon.graphics.extension"
select="'.png'"/>DescriptionSets the extension to use on admonition graphics.admon.graphics.pathstringadmon.graphics.pathPath to admonition graphics<xsl:param name="admon.graphics.path">images/</xsl:param>DescriptionSets the path, probably relative to the directory where the HTML
files are created, to the admonition graphics.
admon.graphicsbooleanadmon.graphicsUse graphics in admonitions?<xsl:param name="admon.graphics"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), admonitions are presented in an alternate style that uses
a graphic. Default graphics are provided in the distribution.
admon.stylestringadmon.styleCSS style attributes for admonitions<xsl:param name="admon.style">
<xsl:text>margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;</xsl:text>
</xsl:param>DescriptionSpecifies the value of the STYLE
attribute that should be added to admonitions.
Calloutscallout.defaultcolumnintegercallout.defaultcolumnIndicates what column callouts appear in by default<xsl:param name="callout.defaultcolumn"
select="'60'"/>DescriptionIf a callout does not identify a column (for example, if it uses
the linerangeunit),
it will appear in the default column.
callout.graphics.extensionstringcallout.graphics.extensionExtension for callout graphics<xsl:param name="callout.graphics.extension"
select="'.png'"/>DescriptionSets the extension to use on callout graphics.callout.graphics.number.limitintegercallout.graphics.number.limitNumber of the largest callout graphic<xsl:param name="callout.graphics.number.limit"
select="'10'"/>DescriptionIf callout.graphics
is non-zero, graphics are used to represent
callout numbers. The value of
callout.graphics.number.limit
is
the largest number for which a graphic exists. If the callout number
exceeds this limit, the default presentation "(nnn)" will always
be used.
callout.graphics.pathstringcallout.graphics.pathPath to callout graphics<xsl:param name="callout.graphics.path"
select="'images/callouts/'"/>DescriptionSets the path, probably relative to the directory where the HTML
files are created, to the callout graphics.
callout.graphicsbooleancallout.graphicsUse graphics for callouts?<xsl:param name="callout.graphics"
select="'1'"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, callouts are presented with graphics (e.g., reverse-video
circled numbers instead of "(1)", "(2)", etc.).
Default graphics are provided in the distribution.
callout.list.tablebooleancallout.list.tablePresent callout lists using a table?<xsl:param name="callout.list.table"
select="'1'"/>DescriptionThe default presentation of CalloutLists uses
an HTML DL. Some browsers don't align DLs very well
if callout.graphics are used. With this option
turned on, CalloutLists are presented in an HTML
TABLE, which usually results in better alignment
of the callout number with the callout description.callout.unicode.number.limitintegercallout.unicode.number.limitNumber of the largest callout graphic<xsl:param name="callout.unicode.number.limit"
select="'10'"/>DescriptionIf callout.graphics
is non-zero, graphics are used to represent
callout numbers. The value of
callout.graphics.number.limit
is
the largest number for which a graphic exists. If the callout number
exceeds this limit, the default presentation "(nnn)" will always
be used.
callout.unicode.start.characterintegercallout.unicode.start.characterFirst Unicode character to use, decimal value.<xsl:param name="callout.unicode.start.character"
select="10102"/>DescriptionIf callout.graphics
is non-zero, graphics are used to represent
callout numbers. The value of
callout.graphics.number.limit
is
the largest number for which a graphic exists. If the callout number
exceeds this limit, the default presentation "(nnn)" will always
be used.
callout.unicodebooleancallout.unicodeUse Unicode characters rather than images for callouts.<xsl:param name="callout.unicode"
select="0"/>DescriptionThe stylesheets can use either an image of the numbers one to ten, or the single Unicode character which represents the numeral, in white on a black background. Use this to select the Unicode character option.
callouts.extensionbooleancallouts.extensionEnable the callout extension<xsl:param name="callouts.extension"
select="'1'"/>DescriptionThe callouts extension processes areaset
elements in ProgramListingCO and other text-based
callout elements.
EBNFebnf.table.bgcolorstringebnf.table.bgcolorBackground color for EBNF tables<xsl:param name="ebnf.table.bgcolor"
select="'#F5DCB3'"/>DescriptionSets the background color for EBNF tables. No bgcolor
attribute is output if ebnf.table.bgcolor is set to
the null string. The default value matches the value used in recent
online versions of the W3C's XML Spec productions.ebnf.table.borderebnf.table.borderSelects border on EBNF tables<xsl:param name="ebnf.table.border"
select="1"/>DescriptionSelects the border on EBNF tables. If non-zero, the tables have
borders, otherwise they don't.ToC/LoT/Index Generationannotate.tocbooleanannotate.tocAnnotate the Table of Contents?<xsl:param name="annotate.toc"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf true, TOCs will be annotated. At present, this just means
that the RefPurpose of RefEntry
TOC entries will be displayed.
autotoc.label.separatorstringautotoc.label.separatorSeparator between labels and titles in the ToC<xsl:param name="autotoc.label.separator"
select="'. '"/>DescriptionString to use to seperate labels and title in a table of contents.process.source.tocbooleanprocess.source.tocFIXME:<xsl:param name="process.source.toc"
select="0"/>DescriptionFIXME:
process.empty.source.tocbooleanprocess.empty.source.tocFIXME:<xsl:param name="process.empty.source.toc"
select="0"/>DescriptionFIXME:
bridgehead.in.tocbooleanbridgehead.in.tocShould bridgehead elements appear in the TOC?<xsl:param name="bridgehead.in.toc"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, bridgeheads appear in the TOC. Note that this option
is not fully supported and may be removed in a future version of the
stylesheets.
manual.tocstringmanual.tocAn explicit TOC to be used for the TOC<xsl:param name="manual.toc"
select="''"/>DescriptionThe manual.toc identifies an explicit TOC that
will be used for building the printed TOC.
toc.list.typelistdluloltoc.list.typeType of HTML list element to use for Tables of Contents<xsl:param name="toc.list.type">dl</xsl:param>DescriptionWhen an automatically generated Table of Contents (or List of Titles)
is produced, this HTML element will be used to make the list.
toc.section.depthintegertoc.section.depthHow deep should recursive sections appear
in the TOC?<xsl:param name="toc.section.depth">2</xsl:param>DescriptionSpecifies the depth to which recursive sections should appear in the
TOC.
generate.toctablegenerate.tocControl generation of ToCs and LoTs<xsl:param name="generate.toc">
appendix toc
article toc
book toc,figure,table,example,equation
chapter toc
part toc
preface toc
qandadiv toc
qandaset toc
reference toc
section toc
set toc
</xsl:param>
DescriptionThis parameter has a structured value. It is a table of space-delimited
path/value pairs. Each path identifies some element in the source document
using a restricted subset of XPath (only the implicit child axis, no wildcards,
no predicates). Paths can be either relative or absolute.When a particular element, the stylesheets consult this table to
determine if a ToC (or LoT(s)) should be generated.For example, consider the entry:book toc,figureThis indicates that whenever a book is formatted, a
Table Of Contents and a List of Figures should be generated. Similarly,/chapter tocindicates that whenever a document that has a root
ofchapter is formatted, a Table of
Contents should be generated. The entry chapter would match
all chapters, but /chapter matches only chapter
document elements.Generally, the longest match wins. So, for example, if you want to distinguish
articles in books from articles in parts, you could use these two entries:book/article toc,figure
part/article tocNote that an article in a part can never match a book/article,
so if you want nothing to be generated for articles in parts, you can simply leave
that rule out.generate.section.toc.levelintegergenerate.section.toc.levelControl depth of TOC generation in sections<xsl:param name="generate.section.toc.level"
select="0"/>DescriptionThe generate.section.toc.level parameter
controls the depth of section in which TOCs will be generated. Note
that this is related to, but not the same as
toc.section.depth, which controls the depth to
which TOC entries will be generated in a given TOC.If, for example, generate.section.toc.level
is 3, TOCs will be generated in first, second, and third
level sections, but not in fourth level sections.
generate.indexbooleangenerate.indexDo you want an index?<xsl:param name="generate.index"
select="1"/>DescriptionSpecify if an index should be generated. Extensionslinenumbering.everyNthintegerlinenumbering.everyNthIndicate which lines should be numbered<xsl:param name="linenumbering.everyNth"
select="'5'"/>DescriptionIf line numbering is enabled, everyNth line will be numbered.
linenumbering.extensionbooleanlinenumbering.extensionEnable the line numbering extension<xsl:param name="linenumbering.extension"
select="'1'"/>DescriptionIf true, verbatim environments (elements that have the
format='linespecific' notation attribute: address, literallayout,
programlisting, screen, synopsis) that specify line numbering will
have, surprise, line numbers.
linenumbering.separatorstringlinenumbering.separatorSpecify a separator between line numbers and lines<xsl:param name="linenumbering.separator"
select="' '"/>DescriptionThe separator is inserted between line numbers and lines in
the verbatim environment.
linenumbering.widthintegerlinenumbering.widthIndicates the width of line numbers<xsl:param name="linenumbering.width"
select="'3'"/>DescriptionIf line numbering is enabled, line numbers will appear right
justified in a field "width" characters wide.
tablecolumns.extensionbooleantablecolumns.extensionEnable the table columns extension function<xsl:param name="tablecolumns.extension"
select="'1'"/>DescriptionThe table columns extension function adjusts the widths of table
columns in the HTML result to more accurately reflect the specifications
in the CALS table.
textinsert.extensionbooleantextinsert.extensionEnable the textinsert extension element<xsl:param name="textinsert.extension"
select="'1'"/>DescriptionThe textinsert extension element inserts the contents of a
a file into the result tree (as text).
use.extensionsbooleanuse.extensionsEnable extensions<xsl:param name="use.extensions"
select="'0'"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, extensions may be used. Each extension is
further controlled by its own parameter. But if
use.extensions is zero, no extensions will
be used.
Automatic labellingchapter.autolabelbooleanchapter.autolabelAre chapters automatically enumerated?<xsl:param name="chapter.autolabel"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), unlabeled chapters will be enumerated.
appendix.autolabelbooleanappendix.autolabelAre Appendixes automatically enumerated?<xsl:param name="appendix.autolabel"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), unlabeled appendixes will be
enumerated.
part.autolabelbooleanpart.autolabelAre parts and references enumerated?<xsl:param name="part.autolabel"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), unlabeled parts and references will be enumerated.
preface.autolabelbooleanpreface.autolabelAre prefaces enumerated?<xsl:param name="preface.autolabel"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), unlabeled prefaces will be enumerated.
qandadiv.autolabelbooleanqandadiv.autolabelAre divisions in QAndASets enumerated?<xsl:param name="qandadiv.autolabel"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), unlabeled qandadivs will be enumerated.
section.autolabelbooleansection.autolabelAre sections enumerated?<xsl:param name="section.autolabel"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), unlabeled sections will be enumerated.
section.label.includes.component.labelbooleansection.label.includes.component.labelDo section labels include the component label?<xsl:param name="section.label.includes.component.label"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), section labels are prefixed with the label of the
component that contains them.
label.from.partbooleanlabel.from.partRenumber chapters in each part?<xsl:param name="label.from.part"
select="'0'"/>DescriptionIf label.from.part is non-zero, components
(chapters, appendixes, etc.)
will be numbered from 1 in each part. Otherwise,
they will be numbered monotonically throughout each
book.
HTMLhtml.baseurihtml.baseAn HTML base URI<xsl:param name="html.base"/>DescriptionIf html.base is set, it is used for the BASE
element in the HEAD of the HTML documents.
This is useful for dynamically served HTML where the base URI needs
to be shifted.html.stylesheet.typestringhtml.stylesheet.typeThe type of the stylesheet used in the generated HTML<xsl:param name="html.stylesheet.type">text/css</xsl:param>DescriptionThe type of the stylesheet to place in the HTML link tag.
html.stylesheetstringhtml.stylesheetName of the stylesheet to use in the generated HTML<xsl:param name="html.stylesheet"
select="''"/>DescriptionThe name of the stylesheet to place in the HTML LINK
tag, or the empty string to suppress the stylesheet LINK.
use.id.as.filenamebooleanuse.id.as.filenameUse ID value of chunk elements as the filename?<xsl:param name="use.id.as.filename"
select="'0'"/>DescriptionIf use.id.as.filename
is non-zero, the filename of chunk elements that have IDs will be
derived from the ID value.
css.decorationbooleancss.decorationEnable CSS decoration of elements<xsl:param name="css.decoration">1</xsl:param>Description
If css.decoration is turned on, then HTML elements
produced by the
stylesheet may be decorated with STYLE attributes. For example, the
LI tags produced for list items may include a fragment of CSS in the
STYLE attribute which sets the CSS property "list-style-type".
spacing.parasbooleanspacing.parasInsert additional <p> elements for spacing?<xsl:param name="spacing.paras"
select="'0'"/>DescriptionWhen non-zero, additional, empty paragraphs are inserted in
several contexts (for example, around informal figures), to create a
more pleasing visual appearance in many browsers.
emphasis.propagates.stylebooleanemphasis.propagates.stylePass emphasis role attribute through to HTML?<xsl:param name="emphasis.propagates.style"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf true, the role attribute of emphasis elements
will be passed through to the HTML as a class attribute on a
span that surrounds the emphasis.phrase.propagates.stylebooleanphrase.propagates.stylePass phrase role attribute through to HTML?<xsl:param name="phrase.propagates.style"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf true, the role attribute of phrase elements
will be passed through to the HTML as a class attribute on a
span that surrounds the phrase.html.longdescbooleanhtml.longdescShould longdesc URIs be created?<xsl:param name="html.longdesc"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, HTML files will be created for the
longdesc attribute. These files
are created from the textobjects in
mediaobjects and
inlinemediaobject.
html.longdesc.linkbooleanhtml.longdesc.linkShould a link to the longdesc be included in the HTML?<xsl:param name="html.longdesc.link"
select="$html.longdesc"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, links will be created to the
HTML files created for the
longdesc attribute. It makes no
sense to turn enable this option without also enabling the
$html.longdesc parameter.The longdesc.link named template is called
to construct the link.make.valid.htmlbooleanmake.valid.htmlAttempt to make sure the HTML output is valid HTML<xsl:param name="make.valid.html"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf make.valid.html is true, the stylesheets take
extra effort to ensure that the resulting HTML is valid. This may mean that some
para tags are translated into HTML divs or
that other substitutions occur.This parameter is different from html.cleanup
because it changes the resulting markup; it does not use extension functions
to manipulate result-tree-fragments and is therefore applicable to any
XSLT processor.html.cleanupbooleanhtml.cleanupAttempt to clean up the resulting HTML?<xsl:param name="html.cleanup"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, and if the EXSLT
extensions are supported by your processor, the resulting HTML will be
cleaned up. This improves the chances that the
resulting HTML will be valid. It may also improve the formatting of
some elements.This parameter is different from make.valid.html
because it uses extension functions to manipulate result-tree-fragments.draft.watermark.imageuridraft.watermark.imageThe URI of the image to be used for draft watermarks<xsl:param name="draft.watermark.image"
select="'http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/images/draft.png'"/>DescriptionThe image to be used for draft watermarks.generate.id.attributesgenerate.id.attributes<xsl:param name="generate.id.attributes"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, the HTML stylesheet will generate ID attributes on
containers. For example, the markup:<section id="foo"><title>Some Title</title>
<para>Some para.</para>
</section>might produce:<div class="section" id="foo">
<h2>Some Title</h2>
<p>Some para.</p>
</div>The alternative is to generate anchors:<div class="section">
<h2><a name="foo"></a>Some Title</h2>
<p>Some para.</p>
</div>Because the name attribute of
the a element and the id
attribute of other tags are both of type ID, producing both
generates invalid documents.As of version 1.50, you can use this switch to control which type of
identifier is generated. For backwards-compatibility, generating
a anchors is preferred.Note: at present, this switch is incompletely implemented.
Disabling ID attributes will suppress them, but enabling ID attributes
will not suppress the anchors.XSLT ProcessingrootidstringrootidSpecify the root element to format<xsl:param name="rootid"
select="''"/>DescriptionIf rootid is specified, it must be the
value of an ID that occurs in the document being formatted. The entire
document will be loaded and parsed, but formatting will begin at the
element identified, rather than at the root. For example, this allows
you to process only chapter 4 of a book.Because the entire document is available to the processor, automatic
numbering, cross references, and other dependencies are correctly
resolved.suppress.navigationbooleansuppress.navigationDisable header and footer navigation<xsl:param name="suppress.navigation">0</xsl:param>Description
If suppress.navigation is turned on, header and
footer navigation will be suppressed.Meta/*Infoinherit.keywordsbooleaninherit.keywordsInherit keywords from ancestor elements?<xsl:param name="inherit.keywords"
select="'1'"/>DescriptionIf inherit.keywords
is non-zero, the keyword META for each HTML
HEAD element will include all of the keywords from
ancestral elements. Otherwise, only the keywords from the current section
will be used.
make.single.year.rangesbooleanmake.single.year.rangesPrint single-year ranges (e.g., 1998-1999)<xsl:param name="make.single.year.ranges"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, year ranges that span a single year will be printed
in range notation (1998-1999) instead of discrete notation
(1998, 1999).make.year.rangesbooleanmake.year.rangesCollate copyright years into ranges?<xsl:param name="make.year.ranges"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, copyright years will be collated into ranges.author.othername.in.middlebooleanauthor.othername.in.middleIs othername in author a
middle name?<xsl:param name="author.othername.in.middle"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), the othername of an author
appears between the firstname and
surname. Otherwise, othername
is suppressed.
generate.legalnotice.linkbooleangenerate.legalnotice.linkTBD<xsl:param name="generate.legalnotice.link"
select="0"/>DescriptionTBDReference Pagesfuncsynopsis.decorationbooleanfuncsynopsis.decorationDecorate elements of a FuncSynopsis?<xsl:param name="funcsynopsis.decoration"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), elements of the FuncSynopsis will be decorated (e.g. bold or
italic). The decoration is controlled by functions that can be redefined
in a customization layer.
funcsynopsis.stylelistansikrfuncsynopsis.styleWhat style of 'FuncSynopsis' should be generated?<xsl:param name="funcsynopsis.style">kr</xsl:param>DescriptionIf funcsynopsis.style is ansi,
ANSI-style function synopses are generated for a
funcsynopsis, otherwise K&R-style
function synopses are generated.
function.parensbooleanfunction.parensGenerate parens after a function?<xsl:param name="function.parens">0</xsl:param>DescriptionIf not 0, the formatting of
a function element will include
generated parenthesis.
refentry.generate.namebooleanrefentry.generate.nameOutput NAME header before 'RefName'(s)?<xsl:param name="refentry.generate.name"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), a "NAME" section title is output before the list
of 'RefName's. This parameter and
refentry.generate.title are mutually exclusive.
refentry.generate.titlebooleanrefentry.generate.titleOutput title before 'RefName'(s)?<xsl:param name="refentry.generate.title"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), the reference page title or first name is
output before the list of 'RefName's. This parameter and
refentry.generate.name are mutually exclusive.
refentry.xref.manvolnumbooleanrefentry.xref.manvolnumOutput manvolnum as part of
refentry cross-reference?<xsl:param name="refentry.xref.manvolnum"
select="1"/>Descriptionif true (non-zero), the manvolnum is used when cross-referencing
refentrys, either with xref
or citerefentry.
citerefentry.linkbooleanciterefentry.linkGenerate URL links when cross-referencing RefEntrys?<xsl:param name="citerefentry.link"
select="'0'"/>DescriptionIf true, a web link will be generated, presumably
to an online man->HTML gateway. The text of the link is
generated by the generate.citerefentry.link template.
refentry.separatorbooleanrefentry.separatorGenerate a separator between consecutive RefEntry elements?<xsl:param name="refentry.separator"
select="'1'"/>DescriptionIf true, a separator will be generated between consecutive
reference pages.
Tablesdefault.table.widthlengthdefault.table.widthThe default width of tables<xsl:param name="default.table.width"
select="''"/>DescriptionIf specified, this value will be used for the WIDTH attribute on
tables that do not specify an alternate width (with the dbhtml processing
instruction).nominal.table.widthlengthnominal.table.widthThe (absolute) nominal width of tables<xsl:param name="nominal.table.width"
select="'6in'"/>DescriptionIn order to convert CALS column widths into HTML column widths, it
is sometimes necessary to have an absolute table width to use for conversion
of mixed absolute and relative widths. This value must be an absolute
length (not a percentag).table.borders.with.cssbooleantable.borders.with.cssUse CSS to specify table, row, and cell borders?<xsl:param name="table.borders.with.css"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), CSS will be used to draw table borders.
table.border.styletable.border.style<xsl:param name="table.border.style"
select="'solid'"/>DescriptionFIXME:table.border.thicknesstable.border.thickness<xsl:param name="table.border.thickness"
select="'0.5pt'"/>DescriptionFIXME:table.border.colortable.border.color<xsl:param name="table.border.color"
select="'black'"/>DescriptionFIXME:QAndASetqanda.defaultlabelbooleanqanda.defaultlabelSets the default for defaultlabel on QandASet.<xsl:param name="qanda.defaultlabel">number</xsl:param>DescriptionIf no defaultlabel attribute is specified on a QandASet, this
value is used. It must be one of the legal values for the defaultlabel
attribute.
qanda.inherit.numerationbooleanqanda.inherit.numerationDoes enumeration of QandASet components inherit the numeration of parent elements?<xsl:param name="qanda.inherit.numeration"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), numbered QandADiv elements and Questions and Answers inherit
the numeration of the ancestors of the QandASet.
Linkinglink.mailto.urlstringlink.mailto.urlMailto URL for the LINK REL=made HTML HEAD element<xsl:param name="link.mailto.url"/>DescriptionIf not the empty string, this address will be used for the
REL=made LINK element in the HTML HEAD.
ulink.targetstringulink.targetThe HTML anchor target for ULinks<xsl:param name="ulink.target"
select="'_top'"/>DescriptionIf ulink.target is set, its value will
be used for the target attribute
on anchors generated for ulinks.olink.fragidstringolink.fragidNames the fragment identifier portion of an OLink resolver query<xsl:param name="olink.fragid"
select="'fragid='"/>DescriptionFIXME:olink.outline.extstringolink.outline.extThe extension of OLink outline files<xsl:param name="olink.outline.ext"
select="'.olink'"/>DescriptionFIXME:olink.pubidstringolink.pubidNames the public identifier portion of an OLink resolver query<xsl:param name="olink.pubid"
select="'pubid='"/>DescriptionFIXME:olink.sysidstringolink.sysidNames the system identifier portion of an OLink resolver query<xsl:param name="olink.sysid"
select="'sysid='"/>DescriptionFIXME:olink.resolverolink.resolverThe root name of the OLink resolver (usually a script)<xsl:param name="olink.resolver"
select="'/cgi-bin/olink'"/>DescriptionFIXME:Bibliographybiblioentry.item.separatorstringbiblioentry.item.separatorText to separate bibliography entries<xsl:param name="biblioentry.item.separator">. </xsl:param>DescriptionText to separate bibliography entries
bibliography.collectionstringbibliography.collectionName of the bibliography collection file<xsl:param name="bibliography.collection"
select="'http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/bibliography/bibliography.xml'"/>DescriptionMaintaining bibliography entries across a set of documents is tedious, time
consuming, and error prone. It makes much more sense, usually, to store all of
the bibliography entries in a single place and simply extract
the ones you need in each document.That's the purpose of the
bibliography.collection parameter. To setup a global
bibliography database, follow these steps:First, create a stand-alone bibliography document that contains all of
the documents that you wish to reference. Make sure that each bibliography
entry (whether you use biblioentry or bibliomixed)
has an ID.My global bibliography, ~/bibliography.xml begins
like this:<!DOCTYPE bibliography
PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd">
<bibliography><title>References</title>
<bibliomixed id="xml-rec"><abbrev>XML 1.0</abbrev>Tim Bray,
Jean Paoli, C. M. Sperberg-McQueen, and Eve Maler, editors.
<citetitle><ulink url="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml">Extensible Markup
Language (XML) 1.0 Second Edition</ulink></citetitle>.
World Wide Web Consortium, 2000.
</bibliomixed>
<bibliomixed id="xml-names"><abbrev>Namespaces</abbrev>Tim Bray,
Dave Hollander,
and Andrew Layman, editors.
<citetitle><ulink url="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/">Namespaces in
XML</ulink></citetitle>.
World Wide Web Consortium, 1999.
</bibliomixed>
<!-- ... -->
</bibliography>
When you create a bibliography in your document, simply
provide emptybibliomixed
entries for each document that you wish to cite. Make sure that these
elements have the same ID as the corresponding real
entry in your global bibliography.For example:<bibliography><title>Bibliography</title>
<bibliomixed id="xml-rec"/>
<bibliomixed id="xml-names"/>
<bibliomixed id="DKnuth86">Donald E. Knuth. <citetitle>Computers and
Typesetting: Volume B, TeX: The Program</citetitle>. Addison-Wesley,
1986. ISBN 0-201-13437-3.
</bibliomixed>
<bibliomixed id="relaxng"/>
</bibliography>Note that it's perfectly acceptable to mix entries from your
global bibliography with normal entries. You can use
xref or other elements to cross-reference your
bibliography entries in exactly the same way you do now.Finally, when you are ready to format your document, simply set the
bibliography.collection parameter (in either a
customization layer or directly through your processor's interface) to
point to your global bibliography.The stylesheets will format the bibliography in your document as if
all of the entries referenced appeared there literally.Glossaryglossterm.auto.linkbooleanglossterm.auto.linkGenerate links from glossterm to glossentry automaticaly?<xsl:param name="glossterm.auto.link"
select="'0'"/>DescriptionIf true, a link will be automatically created from glossterm
to glossentry for that glossary term. This is usefull when your
glossterm names are consistent and you don't want to add links
manually.If there is linkend on
glossterm then is used instead of autogeneration of
link.firstterm.only.linkbooleanfirstterm.only.linkDoes automatic glossterm linking only apply to firstterms?<xsl:param name="firstterm.only.link"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf true, only firstterms will be automatically linked
to the glossary. If glossary linking is not enabled, this parameter
has no effect.glossary.collectionstringglossary.collectionName of the glossary collection file<xsl:param name="glossary.collection"
select="''"/>DescriptionGlossaries maintained independently across a set of documents
are likely to become inconsistent unless considerable effort is
expended to keep them in sync. It makes much more sense, usually, to
store all of the glossary entries in a single place and simply
extract the ones you need in each document.That's the purpose of the
glossary.collection parameter. To setup a global
glossary database, follow these steps:Setting Up the Glossary DatabaseFirst, create a stand-alone glossary document that contains all of
the entries that you wish to reference. Make sure that each glossary
entry has an ID.Here's an example glossary:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE glossary
PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd">
<glossary>
<glossaryinfo>
<editor><firstname>Eric</firstname><surname>Raymond</surname></editor>
<title>Jargon File 4.2.3 (abridged)</title>
<releaseinfo>Just some test data</releaseinfo>
</glossaryinfo>
<glossdiv><title>0</title>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>0</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Numeric zero, as opposed to the letter `O' (the 15th letter of
the English alphabet). In their unmodified forms they look a lot
alike, and various kluges invented to make them visually distinct have
compounded the confusion. If your zero is center-dotted and letter-O
is not, or if letter-O looks almost rectangular but zero looks more
like an American football stood on end (or the reverse), you're
probably looking at a modern character display (though the dotted zero
seems to have originated as an option on IBM 3270 controllers). If
your zero is slashed but letter-O is not, you're probably looking at
an old-style ASCII graphic set descended from the default typewheel on
the venerable ASR-33 Teletype (Scandinavians, for whom /O is a letter,
curse this arrangement). (Interestingly, the slashed zero long
predates computers; Florian Cajori's monumental "A History of
Mathematical Notations" notes that it was used in the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries.) If letter-O has a slash across it and the zero
does not, your display is tuned for a very old convention used at IBM
and a few other early mainframe makers (Scandinavians curse <emphasis>this</emphasis>
arrangement even more, because it means two of their letters collide).
Some Burroughs/Unisys equipment displays a zero with a <emphasis>reversed</emphasis>
slash. Old CDC computers rendered letter O as an unbroken oval and 0
as an oval broken at upper right and lower left. And yet another
convention common on early line printers left zero unornamented but
added a tail or hook to the letter-O so that it resembled an inverted
Q or cursive capital letter-O (this was endorsed by a draft ANSI
standard for how to draw ASCII characters, but the final standard
changed the distinguisher to a tick-mark in the upper-left corner).
Are we sufficiently confused yet?</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>1TBS</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para role="accidence">
<phrase role="pronounce"></phrase>
<phrase role="partsofspeach">n</phrase>
</para>
<para>The "One True Brace Style"</para>
<glossseealso>indent style</glossseealso>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<!-- ... -->
</glossdiv>
<!-- ... -->
</glossary>Marking Up Glossary TermsThat takes care of the glossary database, now you have to get the entries
into your document. Unlike bibliography entries, which can be empty, creating
placeholder glossary entries would be very tedious. So instead,
support for glossary.collection relies on implicit linking.In your source document, simply use firstterm and
glossterm to identify the terms you wish to have included
in the glossary. The stylesheets assume that you will either set the
baseform attribute correctly, or that the
content of the element exactly matches a term in your glossary.If you're using a glossary.collection, don't
make explicit links on the terms in your document.So, in your document, you might write things like this:<para>This is dummy text, without any real meaning.
The point is simply to reference glossary terms like <glossterm>0</glossterm>
and the <firstterm baseform="1TBS">One True Brace Style (1TBS)</firstterm>.
The <glossterm>1TBS</glossterm>, as you can probably imagine, is a nearly
religious issue.</para>If you set the firstterm.only.link parameter,
only the terms marked with firstterm will be links.
Otherwise, all the terms will be linked.Marking Up the GlossaryThe glossary itself has to be identified for the stylesheets. For lack
of a better choice, the role is used.
To identify the glossary as the target for automatic processing, set
the role to auto. The title of this
glossary (and any other information from the glossaryinfo
that's rendered by your stylesheet) will be displayed, but the entries will
come from the database.
Unfortunately, the glossary can't be empty, so you must put in
at least one glossentry. The content of this entry
is irrelevant, it will not be rendered:<glossary role="auto">
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Irrelevant</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>If you can see this, the document was processed incorrectly. Use
the <parameter>glossary.collection</parameter> parameter.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossary>What about glossary divisions? If your glossary database has glossary
divisions and your automatic glossary contains at least
one glossdiv, the automic glossary will have divisions.
If the glossdiv is missing from either location, no divisions
will be rendered.Glossary entries (and divisions, if appropriate) in the glossary will
occur in precisely the order they occur in your database.Formatting the DocumentFinally, when you are ready to format your document, simply set the
glossary.collection parameter (in either a
customization layer or directly through your processor's interface) to
point to your global glossary.The stylesheets will format the glossary in your document as if
all of the entries implicilty referenced appeared there literally.Miscellaneousgraphic.default.extensionstringgraphic.default.extensionDefault extension for graphic filenames<xsl:param name="graphic.default.extension"/>DescriptionIf a graphic or mediaobject
includes a reference to a filename that does not include an extension,
and the format attribute is
unspecified, the default extension will be used.
formal.proceduresbooleanformal.proceduresSelects formal or informal procedures<xsl:param name="formal.procedures"
select="1"/>DescriptionFormal procedures are numbered and always have a title.
formal.title.placementformal.title.placement<xsl:param name="formal.title.placement">
figure before
example before
equation before
table before
procedure before
</xsl:param>DescriptionSpecifies where formal object titles should occur. For each formal object
type (figure,
example,
equation,
table, and procedure)
you can specify either the keyword
before or
after.runinhead.default.title.end.punctstringruninhead.default.title.end.punctDefault punctuation character on a run-in-head<xsl:param name="runinhead.default.title.end.punct"
select="'.'"/>DescriptionFIXME:
runinhead.title.end.punctstringruninhead.title.end.punctCharacters that count as punctuation on a run-in-head<xsl:param name="runinhead.title.end.punct"
select="'.!?:'"/>DescriptionFIXME:
show.commentsbooleanshow.commentsDisplay comment elements?<xsl:param name="show.comments">1</xsl:param>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), comments will be displayed, otherwise they are suppressed.
Comments here refers to the comment element,
which will be renamed remark in DocBook V4.0,
not XML comments (<-- like this -->) which are unavailable.
show.revisionflagbooleanshow.revisionflagEnable decoration of elements that have a revisionflag<xsl:param name="show.revisionflag">0</xsl:param>Description
If show.revisionflag is turned on, then the stylesheets
may produce additional markup designed to allow a CSS stylesheet to
highlight elements that have specific revisionflag settings.The markup inserted will be usually be either a <span> or <div>
with an appropriate class attribute. (The value of
the class attribute will be the same as the value of the revisionflag
attribute). In some contexts, for example tables, where extra markup
would be structurally illegal, the class attribute will be added to the
appropriate container element.In general, the stylesheets only test for revisionflag in contexts
where an importing stylesheet would have to redefine whole templates.
Most of the revisionflag processing is expected to be done by another
stylesheet, for example changebars.xsl.shade.verbatimbooleanshade.verbatimShould verbatim environments be shaded?<xsl:param name="shade.verbatim"
select="0"/>DescriptionFIXME:shade.verbatim.styleshade.verbatim.styleProperties that specify the style of shaded verbatim listings<xsl:attribute-set name="shade.verbatim.style">
<xsl:attribute name="border">0</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:attribute name="bgcolor">#E0E0E0</xsl:attribute>
</xsl:attribute-set>DescriptionFIXME:punct.honorificstringpunct.honorificPunctuation after an honorific in a personal name.<xsl:param name="punct.honorific"
select="'.'"/>DescriptionThis parameter specifies the punctuation that should be added after an
honorific in a personal name.segmentedlist.as.tablebooleansegmentedlist.as.tableFormat segmented lists as tables?<xsl:param name="segmentedlist.as.table"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, segmentedlists will be formatted as
tables.variablelist.as.tablebooleanvariablelist.as.tableFormat variablelists as tables?<xsl:param name="variablelist.as.table"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, variablelists will be formatted as
tables.This parameter only applys to the HTML transformations. In the
FO case, proper list markup is robust enough to handle the formatting.
But see also variablelist.as.blocks.tex.math.in.altstringtex.math.in.altTeX notation used for equations<xsl:param name="tex.math.in.alt"
select="''"/>DescriptionIf you want type math directly in TeX notation in equations,
this parameter specifies notation used. Currently are supported two
values -- plain and latex. Empty
value means that you are not using TeX math at all.Preferred way for including TeX alternative of math is inside of
textobject element. Eg.:<inlineequation>
<inlinemediaobject>
<imageobject>
<imagedata fileref="eq1.gif"/>
</imageobject>
<textobject><phrase>E=mc squared</phrase></textobject>
<textobject role="tex"><phrase>E=mc^2</phrase></textobject>
</inlinemediaobject>
</inlineequation>If you are using graphic element, you can
store TeX inside alt element:<inlineequation>
<alt role="tex">a^2+b^2=c^2</alt>
<graphic fileref="a2b2c2.gif"/>
</inlineequation>If you want use this feature, you should process your FO with
PassiveTeX, which only supports TeX math notation. When calling
stylsheet, don't forget to specify also
passivetex.extensions=1.If you want equations in HTML, just process generated file
tex-math-equations.tex by TeX or LaTeX. Then run
dvi2bitmap program on result DVI file. You will get images for
equations in your document.tex.math.filestringtex.math.fileName of temporary file for generating images from equations<xsl:param name="tex.math.file"
select="'tex-math-equations.tex'"/>DescriptionName of auxiliary file for TeX equations. This file can be
processed by dvi2bitmap to get bitmap versions of equations for HTML
output.tex.math.delimsbooleantex.math.delimsShould be equations outputed for processing by TeX
automatically surrounded by math mode delimiters<xsl:param name="tex.math.delims"
select="'1'"/>DescriptionFor compatibility with DSSSL based DBTeXMath from Allin Cottrell
you should set this parameter to 0.pixels.per.inchintegerpixels.per.inchHow many pixels are there per inch?<xsl:param name="pixels.per.inch"
select="90"/>DescriptionWhen lengths are converted to pixels, this value is used to
determine the size of a pixel. The default value is taken from the
XSL
Recommendation.
Chunkingusing.chunkerbooleanusing.chunkerWill the output be chunked?<xsl:param name="using.chunker"
select="0"/>DescriptionIn addition to providing chunking, the chunker can cleanup a
number of XML to HTML issues. If the chunker is not being used, the
stylesheets try to avoid producing results that will not appear properly
in browsers.
html.exthtml.extIdentifies the extension of generated HTML files<xsl:param name="html.ext"
select="'.html'"/>DescriptionThe extension identified by html.ext will
be used as the filename extension for chunks created by this stylesheet.
root.filenameroot.filenameIdentifies the name of the root HTML file when chunking<xsl:param name="root.filename"
select="'index'"/>DescriptionThe root.filename is the base filename for
the chunk created for the root of each document processed.
base.dirbase.dirThe base directory of chunks<xsl:param name="base.dir"
select="''"/>DescriptionIf specified, the base.dir identifies
the output directory for chunks. (If not specified, the output directory
is system dependent.)chunk.tocstringchunk.tocAn explicit TOC to be used for chunking<xsl:param name="chunk.toc"
select="''"/>DescriptionThe chunk.toc identifies an explicit TOC that
will be used for chunking. This parameter is only used by the
chunktoc.xsl stylesheet (and customization layers built
from it).chunk.section.depthintegerchunk.section.depthDepth to which sections should be chunked<xsl:param name="chunk.section.depth"
select="1"/>DescriptionThis parameter sets the depth of section chunking.chunk.first.sectionschunk.first.sectionsChunk the first top-level section?<xsl:param name="chunk.first.sections"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf non-zero, a chunk will be created for the first top-level
sect1 or section elements in
each component. Otherwise, that section will be part of the chunk for
its parent.
chunk.quietlychunk.quietlyOmit the chunked filename messages.<xsl:param name="chunk.quietly"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf zero (the default), the XSL processor emits a message naming
each separate chunk filename as it is being output.
If nonzero, then the messages are suppressed.
saxon.character.representationstringsaxon.character.representationSaxon character representation used in generated HTML pages<xsl:param name="saxon.character.representation"
select="'entity;decimal'"/>DescriptionThis character representation is used in files generated by chunking stylesheet. If
you want to suppress entity references for characters with direct representation
in default.encoding, set this parameter to value native.
default.encodingstringdefault.encodingEncoding used in generated HTML pages<xsl:param name="default.encoding"
select="'ISO-8859-1'"/>DescriptionThis encoding is used in files generated by chunking stylesheet. Currently
only Saxon is able to change output encoding.
output.methodlisthtmlxmloutput.method<xsl:param name="output.method"
select="'html'"/>DescriptionSelects the output method for chunked documents.chunk.datafilechunk.datafileName of the temporary file used to hold chunking data<xsl:param name="chunk.datafile"
select="'.chunks'"/>DescriptionChunking is now a two-step process. The
chunk.datafile is the name of the file used to
hold the chunking data.
navig.graphicsbooleannavig.graphicsUse graphics in navigational headers and footers?<xsl:param name="navig.graphics"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf true (non-zero), the navigational headers and footers in chunked
HTML are presented in an alternate style that uses
graphical icons for Next, Previous, Up, and Home.
Default graphics are provided in the distribution.
navig.graphics.extensionstringnavig.graphics.extensionExtension for navigational graphics<xsl:param name="navig.graphics.extension"
select="'.gif'"/>DescriptionSets the filename extension to use on navigational graphics used
in the headers and footers of chunked HTML.navig.graphics.pathstringnavig.graphics.pathPath to navigational graphics<xsl:param name="navig.graphics.path">images/</xsl:param>DescriptionSets the path, probably relative to the directory where the HTML
files are created, to the navigational graphics used in the
headers and footers of chunked HTML.
navig.showtitlesbooleannavig.showtitlesDisplay titles in HTML headers and footers?<xsl:param name="navig.showtitles">1</xsl:param>DescriptionIf true (non-zero),
the headers and footers of chunked HTML
display the titles of the next and previous chunks,
along with the words 'Next' and 'Previous' (or the
equivalent graphical icons if navig.graphics is true).
If false (zero), then only the words 'Next' and 'Previous'
(or the icons) are displayed.
ProfilingFollowing parameters can be used for attribute value based
profiling of your document. For more info about profiling look at
http://docbook.sourceforge.net/projects/xsl/doc/tools/profiling.html.profile.archstringprofile.archTarget profile for arch
attribute<xsl:param name="profile.arch"
select="''"/>DescriptionValue of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.conditionstringprofile.conditionTarget profile for condition
attribute<xsl:param name="profile.condition"
select="''"/>DescriptionValue of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.conformancestringprofile.conformanceTarget profile for conformance
attribute<xsl:param name="profile.conformance"
select="''"/>DescriptionValue of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.langstringprofile.langTarget profile for lang
attribute<xsl:param name="profile.lang"
select="''"/>DescriptionValue of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.osstringprofile.osTarget profile for os
attribute<xsl:param name="profile.os"
select="''"/>DescriptionValue of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.revisionstringprofile.revisionTarget profile for revision
attribute<xsl:param name="profile.revision"
select="''"/>DescriptionValue of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.revisionflagstringprofile.revisionflagTarget profile for revisionflag
attribute<xsl:param name="profile.revisionflag"
select="''"/>DescriptionValue of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.rolestringprofile.roleTarget profile for role
attribute<xsl:param name="profile.role"
select="''"/>DescriptionValue of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.securitystringprofile.securityTarget profile for security
attribute<xsl:param name="profile.security"
select="''"/>DescriptionValue of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.userlevelstringprofile.userlevelTarget profile for userlevel
attribute<xsl:param name="profile.userlevel"
select="''"/>DescriptionValue of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.vendorstringprofile.vendorTarget profile for vendor
attribute<xsl:param name="profile.vendor"
select="''"/>DescriptionValue of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.attributestringprofile.attributeName of user-specified profiling attribute<xsl:param name="profile.attribute"
select="''"/>DescriptionThis parameter is used in conjuction with profile.value.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.valuestringprofile.valueTarget profile for user-specified attribute<xsl:param name="profile.value"
select="''"/>DescriptionWhen you are using this parameter you must also specify name of
profiling attribute with parameter profile.attribute.Value of this parameter specifies profiles which should be
included in the output. You can specify multiple profiles by
separating them by semicolon. You can change separator character by
profile.separator
parameter.This parameter has effect only when you are using profiling
stylesheets (profile-docbook.xsl,
profile-chunk.xsl, …) instead of normal
ones (docbook.xsl,
chunk.xsl, …).profile.separatorstringprofile.separatorSeparator character for compound profile values<xsl:param name="profile.separator"
select="';'"/>DescriptionSeparator character for compound profile values.HTML Helphtmlhelp.encodingstringhtmlhelp.encodingCharacter encoding to use in files for HTML Help compiler.<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.encoding"
select="'iso-8859-1'"/>DescriptionHTML Help Compiler is not UTF-8 aware, so you should always use
apropriate single-byte encoding here.htmlhelp.autolabelbooleanhtmlhelp.autolabelShould tree-like ToC use autonumbering feature?<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.autolabel"
select="0"/>DescriptionIf you want to include chapter and section numbers into ToC in
the left panel, set this parameter to 1.htmlhelp.chmstringhtmlhelp.chmFilename of output HTML Help file.<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.chm"
select="'htmlhelp.chm'"/>DescriptionChange this parameter if you want different name of result
CHM file than htmlhelp.chm.htmlhelp.default.topicstringhtmlhelp.default.topicName of file with default topic<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.default.topic"
select="''"/>DescriptionNormally first chunk of document is displayed when you open HTML
Help file. If you want to display another topic, simply set its
filename by this parameter.This is useful especially if you don't generate ToC in front of
your document and you also hide root element in ToC. E.g.:<xsl:param name="generate.book.toc" select="0"/>
<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.hhc.show.root" select="0"/>
<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.default.topic" select="'pr01.html'"/>htmlhelp.hhpstringhtmlhelp.hhpFilename of project file.<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.hhp"
select="'htmlhelp.hhp'"/>DescriptionChange this parameter if you want different name of project
file than htmlhelp.hhp.htmlhelp.hhcstringhtmlhelp.hhcFilename of TOC file.<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.hhc"
select="'toc.hhc'"/>DescriptionChange this parameter if you want different name of TOC file
than toc.hhc.htmlhelp.hhp.tailstringhtmlhelp.hhp.tailAdditional content for project file.<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.hhp.tail"/>DescriptionIf you want to include some additional parameters into project file,
store appropriate part of project file into this parameter.htmlhelp.enumerate.imagesbooleanhtmlhelp.enumerate.imagesShould be paths to all used images added to project file?<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.enumerate.images"
select="0"/>DescriptionYou should turn on this flag, if you insert images into your documents
as external binary entities or if you are using absolute path in image names.htmlhelp.force.map.and.aliasbooleanhtmlhelp.force.map.and.aliasShould be [MAP] and [ALIAS] section added to project file unconditionaly?<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.force.map.and.alias"
select="0"/>DescriptionYou should turn on this flag, if you have your own
alias.h and contex.h files
and you want include reference to them in project file.htmlhelp.map.filestringhtmlhelp.map.fileFilename of map file.<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.map.file"
select="'context.h'"/>DescriptionChange this parameter if you want different name of map file
than context.h.htmlhelp.alias.filestringhtmlhelp.alias.fileFilename of map file.<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.alias.file"
select="'alias.h'"/>DescriptionChange this parameter if you want different name of map file
than alias.h.htmlhelp.hhc.section.depthintegerhtmlhelp.hhc.section.depthDepth of TOC for sections in a left pane.<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.hhc.section.depth"
select="5"/>DescriptionChange this parameter if you want shallower ToC in a left pane
of HTML Help viewer.htmlhelp.hhc.show.rootbooleanhtmlhelp.hhc.show.rootShould be entry for root element shown in ToC?<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.hhc.show.root"
select="1"/>DescriptionIf set to 0, there will be no entry for root element in
ToC. This is useful when you want provide user with expanded ToC as
a default.htmlhelp.hhc.folders.instead.bookshtmlhelp.hhc.folders.instead.books<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.hhc.folders.instead.books"
select="1"/>DescriptionThis parameter controls whether there should be folder-like
icons (1) or book-like icons (0) in ToC.htmlhelp.titlestringhtmlhelp.titleTitle of HTML Help<xsl:param name="htmlhelp.title"
select="''"/>DescriptionContent of this parameter will be used as a title for generated
HTML Help. If empty, title will be automatically taken from document.The StylesheetThe param.xsl stylesheet is just a wrapper
around all these parameters.
<!-- This file is generated from param.xweb; do not edit this file! -->
<xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
exclude-result-prefixes="src"
version="1.0">
<!-- ********************************************************************
$Id: param.xml,v 1.2 2002-09-13 22:40:29 cjones Exp $
********************************************************************
This file is part of the XSL DocBook Stylesheet distribution.
See ../README or http://nwalsh.com/docbook/xsl/ for copyright
and other information.
******************************************************************** -->
</xsl:stylesheet>