Thanks for your contribution. In order to allow users to easily share useful configurations, XXE 3.1 will have an add-on manager.
This add-on manager will allow users to very simply and very quickly download (from our web site and/or from third party web sites and/or from a local directory) and install all sorts of add-ons (configurations, localizations, dictionaries, FO processor plug-ins, image toolkit plug-ins, etc). David Mundie wrote: > Back in December I asked if anyone had any bibliographic templates they > could share. There were no replies, so I went on to develop my own. I > thought I'd post them to the list in case they may beuseful to others. > > My original intent was to use Docbook's bibliographic elements, but in > the meantime I discovered refdb (<http://refdb.sourceforge.net/>) and > the RISX bibliographic DTD, which is the first bibliographic data model > I've actually liked - the clean distinctions among analytic, > monographic, and serial data makes a lot of sense to me. In theory the > templates could be converted to Docbook by storing their contents in > refdb and then exporting as Docbook. The templates are based on the six > use cases implicit in the descriptions of the Chicago Manual of Style > bibliographies (e.g. at <http://www.libs.uga.edu/ref/ chicago.html>). > > Along with the templates, I developed a stylesheet that presents the > entries as nested boxes. I've attached both the stylesheet and the > risx.xxe file. You did all the hard work, but I didn't manage to test your work simply because you forgot to specify a *document* *template* in your config (if possible, with a local copy of the RISX bibliographic DTD + its associated catalog.xml).

