Thanks Bob. I am using DobuDish which I thought was 5, but it did not like the 
d: so I removed it.
The file names are now unbroken however they no longer have a font style.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Bob Stayton 
  To: Brendan DeTracey ; [email protected] 
  Cc: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, March 19, 2012 2:05 PM
  Subject: Re: [docbook] pdf/html element customization - line breaks


  Hi Brendan,
  For the filename element, you could try a customization like this:

  <xsl:template match="d:filename">
    <fo:inline keep-together.within-line="always">
      <xsl:apply-imports/>
    </fo:inline>
  </xsl:template>

  (Omit the d: in the match attribute if you are using DocBook 4.)

  Bob Stayton
  Sagehill Enterprises
  [email protected]


    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Brendan DeTracey 
    To: [email protected] 
    Cc: [email protected] 
    Sent: Monday, March 19, 2012 6:00 AM
    Subject: Re: [docbook] pdf/html element customization - line breaks


    I suppose I will manually backslash and linebreak for both html and pdf. I 
now see that others have had to do this (Appendix A ,example A-7 from Advanced 
Bash Scripting at Linux Documentation Project. Manual backslash in both html 
and pdf versions.)

    Now if only I could stop pdf from line-breaking filename elements. Any help 
with this?

    Thanks,
    Brendan
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Bob Plantz 
      To: Brendan DeTracey 
      Cc: [email protected] 
      Sent: Sunday, March 18, 2012 10:00 PM
      Subject: Re: [docbook] pdf/html element customization - line breaks


      On 3/18/2012 4:14 PM, Brendan DeTracey wrote: 
        Hello,

        I have been using the computeroutput element, but have a problem with 
line breaks in pdf when my line is too long. In html the user can resize the 
window to fit the entire line of text but pdf breaks the line clumsily. How do 
other authors deal with this issue?

        Thanks,
        Brendan
      That's the difference between pdf and html. With pdf you specify the 
presentation formats on the page. With html the reading device has a lot of 
control over the presentation in the window. Even the user has some control 
over an html presentation, but not with pdf.

      My solution? I'm currently working on converting my textbook from LaTeX 
(to produce pdf) to ePub (html under the hood). The tools for the conversion 
are primitive, at best. Since it's a technical book (assembly language 
programming, etc.), I'm having to eliminate a lot of the nice formatting that 
LaTeX allows on the printed page. But students these days prefer electronic 
reading, even if it means dealing with the problems of pdf on portable devices.

      --Bob

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