Fortunately most of my readers can understand what I'm writing (which is why I 
do it) :-)

I will use your feedback to correct the markup on the OpenOffice generated page 
by hand, just as a matter of principle.

The w3 validator thingy seems prepared to accept that the markup within the 
other pages (not the OpenOffice one) is consistent with the dtd at the top of 
each page, except for the bits I *didn't* use markdown for (e.g. tables). 

Which brings me, in a rather roundabout way, to the point I made in my reply to 
Alan Lord. Hand coded (x)html, viewed in a browser, and checked with a 
validator, is great but takes ages. I find that banging my text into an editor 
then using the markdown script to convert it to (x)html is much quicker, and 
results in less mistakes. That is probably just me being a bit of an end user.

None of this is helping Mike Hingley with his original question, but, anyone 
have any recommendations for the easiest way to do LaTeX -> (x)html?

Cheers

On Sat, 5 Jan 2013 21:16:04 +0000
Sean Miller <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 5 January 2013 21:14, Sean Miller <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> > And the generated HTML is HTML 4 at best, probably more like HTML 3....
> > nothing like XHTML.
> >
> 
> That is the OpenOffice generated HTML to which I refer.
> 
> Still don't quite understand the stuff generated by your shell scripts.
> 
> Sean


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