Dear lynx,
Under Linux text terminal, I'm using the following tools to convert
files into html and then reading the content with lynx:
MS-Word: .doc .DOC (wvHtml)
MS-Word: .docx .DOCX (xsltproc docx2txt.xsl)
Ritch Text Format: .rtf (ted)
Portable Document Format: .pdf .PDF (pdftohtml)
MS-excel: .xls (xlhtml)
MS-Powerpoint: .ppt (ppthtml)
tex: .tex .TEX (latex2html)
I'm currently playing arround with unoconv to deal with other formats
like *.pptx .odt ...
I start the *.format-to-html script with a VIEWER line in .lynx-cfg
which again starts a new instance of lynx for viewing the output.
Does anyone have an idea, how to convert for example a pdf by
a script to html and than pass the current location of the resulting
html file to the existing instance of lynx?
Kind regards
Klaus
On Fri, 3 Aug 2012, David Woolley wrote:
Johnson, Tracy wrote:
My question is more general, how does lynx work with newer file formats
such as xml, PDF, and files intended for BYOD such as Kindle?
If I remember correctly, PDF is older than HTML. At worst, it is only a
couple of years newer than the early versions of HTML.
I believe Lynx can parse XHTML, which is a use of XML. Generally though, XML
can't be read as much more than a tree structure without s specific
application, as it is a low level building block for application specific
file formats.
--
David Woolley
Emails are not formal business letters, whatever businesses may want.
RFC1855 says there should be an address here, but, in a world of spam,
that is no longer good advice, as archive address hiding may not work.
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