Oh, I see what you mean now. I refer to those as local TOCs. I suppose your
choice of articles influences whether those are available, but there is
probably a way to automate what you are doing. Can you provide more detail
as to the markup you are using, and the results you want?
--Aaron


On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 2:58 AM, Fredrik Unger <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Aaron,
>
> Thanks, yes you are probably right.
>
> The "book" used to be an Docbook book, with a proper TOC and everything.
> Now, I built a tool to publish a website out of a collection of articles,
> so I ended up converting the chapters to articles.
> What I was missing was the old kind of TOC. Where the Book had a TOC and
> also each chapter had a small TOC.
>
> I concentrated to much on getting <toc> to work in this context as it
> "felt right" than to look at other options.
>
> Thanks, I will have another look on what markup could fit better.
>
> /Fred
>
> On 01/24/2013 01:49 PM, Aaron DaMommio wrote:
>
>> Your manual toc doesn't sound much like a TOC. Isn't it really just a
>> set of cross-references or links that you can put in an itemized list or
>> some other structure. If it doesn't express the contents of its
>> container, how is it a table of contents?
>>
>> If that doesn't make sense to you, then show us what your manual TOC
>> looks like exactly, so we can comment further. I don't understand why
>> you'd want to use a <toc> element for this manual stuff.
>> --Aaron
>>
>
> ------------------------------**------------------------------**---------
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: 
> docbook-apps-unsubscribe@**lists.oasis-open.org<[email protected]>
> For additional commands, e-mail: 
> [email protected]**open.org<[email protected]>
>
>


-- 
--------------------------------------
Aaron DaMommio: Husband, father, writer, juggler, and expert washer of
dishes.
- My blog: http://aarondamommio.blogspot.com
- Need a juggler?  http://amazingaaronjuggler.blogspot.com/
=======================================

Reply via email to