Hi Edwin,
I, for one, would like to encourage the kinds of innovations that you are 
suggesting.  From my perspective, these would not necessarily be included in 
the stock distribution, but could be a customization layer made available to 
anyone who wants them.

As a start, I'd like to distinguish between the implementation of the features 
in CSS/Javascript/etc., and the hooks that are needed in the DocBook HTML 
output that enable those features. Currently the DocBook distro provides 
support for CSS without providing much actual CSS styling. Similarly the 
stylesheets provide params and placeholder templates for injecting javascript 
code into head elements, without supplying any of that code.  I'm curious as to 
how far you can get with the existing support for CSS and Javascript.

If you find during your development that you need changes to the standard 
output to enable you to layer on your enhancements, I'd like to hear about 
those base changes. Those enabling changes could perhaps be included in the 
base distribution to make such development easier, without adding the actual 
new features to the output.

Bob Stayton
Sagehill Enterprises
[email protected]


From: Edwin Aldridge 
Sent: Thursday, April 25, 2013 2:56 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: [docbook-apps] Ajax HTML format wanted


I am writing a set of docbook articles which I would like presented on the web 
but I find the HTML and XHTML formats really clunky. Aesthetics asice, they 
certainly do not take advantage of the medium's capabilities and am looking for 
something a bit smarter. 


Does anyone know of, or would anyone be interested in developing, stylesheet 
variant which does something like the following:


* present chapters down one side - just one level, definitely no tree 
structures dancing before your eyes
* present first level sections as tabs across the top
* present lower level sections as headings (writing to a limit of two levels is 
a useful discipline)
* present sidebars on the side (like the FO transforms) but say as accordians
* present foot notes and glossary terms as pinable popups onclick or mouseover


This could also make use of the much wider screens now commonly available, e.g. 
giving lots of display room for sidebars. It would make better use of internal 
links and non-serial reading approaches (which readers often don#'t  do with 
dead tree media and never do with the web). 



There are a few practical challenges - like making the doc display correctly 
when someone links to an internal URL, but I am sure this is not beyond the wit 
of someone with good JQuery skills (or similar).


Does anyone know if there is anything out there like that? Or would anyone be 
interested enough to do something like this?


Regards
Edwin Aldridge

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