://www.myrnham.co.uk/ too. The products there don't answer you question specifically but it might be of interest (for the rest of the mailing list too)...
Mart
Martin Gautier
Technology Consultant
Myrnham Associates
Ph: 0709 2234 228
Fax: (0870) 2841 930
Martin Gautier
Myrnham Associates
klaas holwerda [EMAIL PROTECTED]
20/08/01 22:12
To:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:
Subject:DOCBOOK-APPS: best tool for docbook?
Hi,
I always use a standard text editor (scintilla or nedit) with only
the shelf and supporting all the usual formats - RTF/DOC, HTML (chunked unchunked), PDF.
Mart
Martin Gautier
Technology Consultant
Myrnham Associates
Ph: 0709 2234 228
Fax: 0702 0967 322
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web: http://www.myrnham.co.uk
Martin Gautier
Technology Consultant
Myrnham Associates
Ph: 0709 2234 228
Fax: 0702 0967 322
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web: http://www.myrnham.co.uk/
(for historical reasons rather than
technical).
Mart
Martin Gautier
Technology Consultant
Myrnham Associates
Ph: 0709 2234 228
Fax: 0702 0967 322
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web: http://www.myrnham.co.uk/
Hi there
I'm wanting to check my docbook XML files to ensure that all xref tags
contain valid links to xreflabel tags.
Before I dive into building something to give me a nice little list of
un-resolvable xrefs, has anyone done something similar already?
Anyone got any tips?
TIA
Mart
Sorry, just a typo - I was refering to the common attribute xreflabel
that I've added to stuff like chapter section
My Parser tends to chuck out loads of noise - My aim is to get just a nice
little list of xrefs that don't point anywhere that I could refer to
when editing. My source docs are
Norm
I regularly convert Word docs and other types of XML docs to Docbook. This
process usually requires and series of steps and, due to the nature of the
conversions (especially with RTF to XML), errors in the Docbook XML appear
- hence the noise on my parsers...
I try to automate as much
Ok, then here's my suggestion.
Thanks Norm, I'll give it a go...
Mart