Camille,

That worked brilliantly, thanks.

Russell

2008/8/26 Russell Seymour <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> Camille,
>
> Thanks very much for the pointer.  I will give it a go and let you know how
> it goes.
>
> Russell
>
>
>
> 2008/8/26 Camille Bégnis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> Hi,
>>
>> yes that looks completely reasonable, you'd just need to decide what
>> markup in the source XML would be used to hold the client name, for example
>> <phrase role="xslparam" vendor="output.client"/> (completely wild guess).
>>
>> and then define in your custom XSL the function that will match the above
>> element and replace it with the content of the $output.client parameter....
>>
>> Hope that helps,
>>
>> Camille.
>>
>>
>> Russell Seymour wrote:
>>
>>> Good afternoon,
>>>
>>> I am starting to work with Docbook again after a long time of not using
>>> it.
>>>
>>> I am trying to find my feet again, and I am sure there is something that
>>> I used to do that I cannot work out how to do how so I am hoping you will be
>>> able to assist me.
>>>
>>> I would like to set a parameter on the command line that sets the client,
>>> e.g. --stringparam output.client "ACME" and then use the output.client
>>> within the Docbook markup and for ACME to be displayed in the final output.
>>>
>>> Is this possible or have I lost I completely lost the plot?
>>>
>>> Thanks, Russell
>>>
>>
>

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