CasellasRamon JamesDevenish 2000 2001 2002 2003 Ramon Casellas Xref, Cross References <filename>xref.mod.xsl</filename>
Introduction
Anchor XSL template The anchor element The DB2LaTeX processing of the element is quite straightforward : Map to a \label. \hypertarget{ }{} Auxiliary named template This template returns 1 if there exists somewhere an xref whose linkend is the target's id. Auxiliary named template Called to process an xreflabel...you might use this to make xreflabels come out in the right font for different targets, for example. Xref and Link XSL Template XRef to nonexistent id: XrefId[? ?] Endterm points to nonexistent ID: [NONEXISTENT ID] {[ ]} [%p] Choose hyperlink syntax Will use hyperref, if it is available. Otherwise, just outputs unlinked text. If the destination is a citation, a backreference is emitted (even though it is technically a hyperlink, not a citation). If the 'text' arises from an @endterm, then the 'optional argument' syntax of \cite is used. \docbooktolatexcite { }{ } \hyperlink{ } { \docbooktolatexbackcite{ } } Insert page number into xrefs %p \pageref*{ } Numbering template Let LaTeX manage the numbering. Otherwise sty files that do specify another numberic (e.g I,II) get messed {\ref*{}} FIXME FIXME %g %n [Don't know what gentext to create for xref to: " "] UNKGENTEXT [ ] {\em } A link that addresses its target by means of a URL (Uniform Resource Locator) Pertinent Variables \docbookhyphenateurl \href{ } { } OLink XSL template {\em } \url{ } \href{ }{\texttt{ }} Escape and hyphenate a string as a teletype URL. This template typsets teletype text using slash.hyphen if $latex.hyphenation.tttricks is disabled. Has two parameters: 'hyphenation' and 'string'. { }