On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 12:41 PM, Johannes Wilm <[email protected]> wrote: > > > On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 2:31 AM, Patrick Gundlach <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> Am 20.07.2011 um 11:22 schrieb Ulrike Fischer: >> >> > Am Tue, 19 Jul 2011 21:57:08 -0700 schrieb Johannes Wilm: >> > >> >> Hey, >> >> I have had issues with converting latex to epub/html/mobipocket for >> >> years. I >> >> started using lualatex some months ago and it works quite well for all >> >> my >> >> other purposes. >> >> >> >> Today I then stumbled over the \setupbackend which is available in >> >> Context >> >> and which allows for HTML/epub to be produced easily by using some lua >> >> code. >> >> Now as I understand it, given that lualatex uses the same binary and >> >> hat the >> >> conversion likely happens by first letting the binary read the entire >> >> DOM >> >> and then exporting it, it seems that the same scripts really should >> >> work for >> >> lualatex as well, right? >> > >> > Theoretically: yes. >> >> There is a little bit more to it, though it can be simulated otherwise. >> For example with ConTeXt you have more structured sectioning commands. I >> don't remember what it was but something like >> >> \startsection >> ... >> \stopsection >> >> where in LaTeX you have \section{...}, but when does the section end? Is >> it always clear? > > So you are saying that the binary, after reading a latex file, isn't quite > aware of the DOM-structure of the file, while after reading a Context-file > it is? ConTeXt MKIV has facility to make pdf/a files , which are tagged pdf (i.e. the pdf has a sort of DOM inside).
-- luigi
