From fca59bea770346cf1c1f9b0e00cb48a61b44a8f3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Harald Welte Date: Sun, 25 Oct 2015 21:00:20 +0100 Subject: import of old now defunct presentation slides svn repo --- 2005/flow-accounting-lt2005/ltpdk/LT-DOCBOOK | 122 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 122 insertions(+) create mode 100644 2005/flow-accounting-lt2005/ltpdk/LT-DOCBOOK (limited to '2005/flow-accounting-lt2005/ltpdk/LT-DOCBOOK') diff --git a/2005/flow-accounting-lt2005/ltpdk/LT-DOCBOOK b/2005/flow-accounting-lt2005/ltpdk/LT-DOCBOOK new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4b15326 --- /dev/null +++ b/2005/flow-accounting-lt2005/ltpdk/LT-DOCBOOK @@ -0,0 +1,122 @@ +Crashcourse Tutorial on how to use XML/DocBook for LinuxTag Papers +================================================================== + +Papers for the LinuxTag Conferences should be submitted in a subset of +XML/DocBook. The structure of this format is described in this text. +This document is part of the LinuxTag Paper Development Kit (ltpdk). +Please make sure that you have read the README before you dive into this +text. + +There is also an "example" directory, which contains some documents +explaining the use of XML/DocBook. + + +Basics of XML +------------- + +XML works quite similar to HTML but is a little more strict in terms of +syntax. All markup is written in tags just like in HTML. For example, +
is an opening tag for the container "section". An opening tag +can be accompained by attributes as in . + +The most important rules are: + + - All tags have to be closed, there are no exceptions like in HTML. + + - To abbreviate opening and closing a tag, you can add a trailing + slash at the opening tag: "" is equivalent to "". + + - All tag names and all attribute names have to use lowercase + charcters and are case sensitive, unlike HTML. Values for attributes + have to be quoted: <ulink url="mailto:a@b.de">. + + +Structure of an XML document +---------------------------- + +There is a framework and a header for each XML document. For LinuxTag +papers these headers look the same for all papers and should be used +directly from the template. Just correct your name, the title of the +paper and your paper id according to the README in the ltpdk. After this +header the body of the <article> container follows. + + +List of valid DocBook elements +------------------------------ + +We recommend only a subset of the full DocBook standard, so please use +only the following elements for the body of your paper: + +<section> Creates new sections and subsections. + +<title> Should be used as first container in every <section> + and can be also used inside tables and figures. + +<para> For normal text. Note that this container is + necessary, you can't type directly into a <section> + container. + +<itemizedlist> For ordered and unordered itemized lists. Every +<orderedlist> single item needs a <listitem> container, which has +<listitem> to be closed! Usually you place a <para> inside your + <listitem>. + +<programlisting> Everything inside will be quoted verbatim. See + example document for important hints. + +<table> To create tables quite similar to HTML. See example +<tgroup> document. +<tbody> +<thead> +<tfoot> +<row> +<entry> + +<emphasis> The only text markup we support to emphasis a text + (may later be displayed bold or in italics in print) + +<ulink> To link to external URIs. Since your papers should + be more or less self-contained, don't make too much + use of this tag. The tag can be placed in any <para>. + +<mediaobject> To include a figure, like a diagramm or a picture. + See the example document for details. + + + +Structure of the body +--------------------- + +Start with a <section>, followed by a <title>. + +Now follows an arbitrary number of either simple paragraphs, lists, +tables, verbatim text or a sub level of a section. + +Inside these there's just text, emphasized text, figures or links. + +That's about all ;) + + +Further information +------------------- + +If you are really interested in XML/DocBook, have a look at + + http://www.docbook.org/ + +But beware: This is mainly a highly technical reference guide. A good +starting point in this somewhat confusing website is + + http://www.docbook.org/tdg/en/html/ref-elements.html + +A much more comprehensive introduction is + + http://xml.web.cern.ch/XML/goossens/dbatcern/ + +especially the chapters 3 - 7 describe the above in more detail. + +Finally there are links to some other tutorials, the last two in german: + + http://opensource.bureau-cornavin.com/crash-course/ + http://rzserv2.fhnon.de/~lg002556/docbuch/ + http://trieloff.net/doctutorial/ -- cgit v1.2.3