Re: Fwd: Gnome User Guide



Hi daniel,

I've used the xmlfilter in OpenOffice to export to simplified docbook. That works relative good. Mean the document structure is well transferred, if one uses the stylelist for headings and stuff.
The filter is realytive simple though. E.g. image placements are not kept.

Xmlminds XXE would be really a better choice here. It gives a good preview and support docbook very well.

Stefan

Daniel Espinosa wrote:
What about to OpenOffice.org, any one know if there exist a utility to convert text (OpenDocument is a XML version) to a DocBook?

2005/12/14, Stefan Kost <ensonic hora-obscura de <mailto:ensonic hora-obscura de>>:

    Hi,

    Joachim Noreiko wrote:
     > --- Stefan Kost <ensonic hora-obscura de
    <mailto:ensonic hora-obscura de>> wrote:
     >
     >
     >> are you aware of
     >> http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/
     >>
     >> It's an java based xml editor with WYSIWYG. The
     >> standard edition is free.
     >>
     >
     > I found it when I googled for XML editors, but I
     > wasn't sure what to download for Linux, and as it's
     > not free it's not available directly through my
     > distro's packages.
     >
    http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/download.shtml
    <http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/download.shtml>
    http://www.xmlmind.net/xmleditor/_download/xxe-std-30p1.tar.gz
     > I tried Conglomerate, which looks very nice but
     > crashed almost immediately... back to bugzilla!
     >
     >
    I've tried it once and though the same - looks good, but needs time.
     >> Developers probably continue to use their text
     >> editor ;) (like me)
     >>
     >
     > Same here.
     > Though which text editor?
     > Gedit lacks features such as removing/adding
     > indentation, and its handling of line endings makes it
     > a real pain to move things around in a file.
     > Bluefish is ok, once I've turned off most of the spare
     > toolbar clutter and got over the dialog buttons being
     > the wrong way round. But it doesn't respond to basic
     > stuff like dragging a file from nautilus to open it.
     >
     >
    I use JEdit. It a cool editor. Again java. I was working on java
    project
    at some time and quickly became contributor for this editor. Still using
    it as it has mighty features. My favorite is that you can run search
    replace recursively over files mathcing a glob, searching for an regexp
    and replacing it with a beanshell snippet which can acces the regexp
    matches as objects. beanshell is sort of an java interpreter (example:
    _1.toUpper() would replace the first atch of the regexp with an
    uppercase representation). ;)
    The editor has good XML/XSLT support.

    Stefan




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