I’m thinking of taking on the task of creating a docbook customization, similar 
to the iso690 customization, to process bibliographic information in the 
Chicago Manual of Style format.

Before I dive in head first, I thought I’d check with the group to see if 
anyone has already done that.

Also, I have an additional question that might more appropriately belong in the 
docbook list, but I’ll give it a shot:

To streamline the markup of inline references to bibliographic entries, I 
wonder whether it would stretch the standard too far to interpret a linkend in 
a citetitle as pointing to a bibliographic reference and process it as though 
it were a biblioref immediately following the citetitle. So, for example,

<citetitlef pubwork=“book” linkend=“ref.stayton2007”>DocBook XSL: The Complete 
Guide</citetitle>

would be interpreted as equivalent to <citetitle pubwork=“book”>DocBook XSL: 
The Complete Guide</citetitle><biblioref linkend=“ref.stayton2007”/>

Since the ultimate result is a link (the only difference is that the link text 
would be an inline tag, e.g., [Stayton 2007], rather than the title text), I 
don’t think it’s too far out there.

But, to take it a step further, how about interpreting <citetitle 
pubwork=“book”  linkend=“ref.stayton2007”/>
the same way, but pulling the title from the referenced biblioentry/bibliomixed 
element when the citetitle element is empty.

Any thoughts?

Best regards,
Dick Hamilton
-------
XML Press
XML for Technical Communicators
http://xmlpress.net
[email protected]




---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]
For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]

Reply via email to