Hi Christian, Fred and everyone else, On Wed, 10 Sep 2003, Fred L. Drake, Jr. wrote:
> > Christian Mensing writes: > > An other fine layout I whould like to apply is the alphabetical > > subsectioning of a long index as in the current on-line manual. > > http://www-texdev.mpce.mq.edu.au/l2h/docs/manual/node11_ct.html > > That's a cool index! I'd not looked at this version before, I think. Thanks. There are some cute ideas programmed into that, to make extensive use of hyperlinks and the \label/ref mechanism. You should already have the coding for it, as part of the LaTeX2HTML docs that come with the distribution, in the docs/ subdirectory. It's towards the end of docs/manual.tex . It works as follows: \printindex % % Alphabetization and navigation within the index % ...these special index entries must come *after* the \printindex % else half of the hyperlinks will point to the preceding page. % \begin{htmlonly} [EMAIL PROTECTED] \htmlref{\HTML{SUB}{\LARGE #3}}{AZ}\htmlref{_}{#4}\label{#5}| }} % \indexAlpha{\$}{Z}{\$}{dot}{doll}% \indexAlpha{.}{doll}{~.~}{A}{dot}% \indexAlpha{A}{dot}{A}{B}{A}% \indexAlpha{B}{A}{B}{C}{B}% \indexAlpha{C}{B}{C}{D}{C}% etc. % %% This is an alphabetical navigation panel. [EMAIL PROTECTED] \htmlref{\$}{doll} \htmlref{.}{dot} \htmlref{A}{A} \htmlref{B}{B} \htmlref{C}{C} \htmlref{D}{D} \htmlref{E}{E} \htmlref{F}{F} \htmlref{G}{G} \htmlref{H}{H} \htmlref{I}{I} \htmlref{J}{K} \htmlref{K}{K} \htmlref{L}{L} \htmlref{M}{M} \htmlref{N}{N} \htmlref{O}{O} \htmlref{P}{P} \htmlref{Q}{R} \htmlref{R}{R} \htmlref{S}{S} \htmlref{T}{T} \htmlref{U}{U} \htmlref{V}{V} \htmlref{W}{W} \htmlref{X}{X} \htmlref{Y}{Z} \htmlref{Z}{Z}}\\ \htmlrule[all]| } \end{htmlonly} > > The scripts I use aren't well documented at this time, but are freely > available (including the l2hinit.perl I use) as part of the "latex" > flavor of the Python documentation: > > http://www.python.org/doc/current/download.html > > I'm always happy to answer questions about what I've done. I always leave the LaTeX source accessible in the directory where the web-pages were generated and displayed, as the LaTeX2HTML default location. Hence you can deduce the name of the source document from that of the directory. Hope this helps, Ross Moore > > > -Fred > > -- > Fred L. Drake, Jr. <fdrake at acm.org> > PythonLabs at Zope Corporation > _______________________________________________ > latex2html mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/latex2html > _______________________________________________ latex2html mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/latex2html