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Karl Eichwalder

keichwa

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Using DiffMk, you can build an automated comparison of two XML
documents. The output format for viewing is HTML.

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This package contains the DITA specifications, DTDs, and schemas.

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Stylesheets for processing DITA documents.

These cascading stylesheets allow you to view a DocBook XML document in
software that supports XML styled with CSS2, for example, a recent
Mozilla or Firefox browser. For more complex modifications of your XML
document use the DocBook XSL stylesheets.

Use these DSSSL stylesheets to convert DocBook documents into other
formats. "Print" (TeX and RTF) and "online" (HTML) output formats are
available.

The stylesheets are customizable and, within limits, it is possible to
adapt them for your own needs. Numerous native languages are supported.

The authors of these stylesheets do not inlude any new features, but
only fix bugs.

This package contains the Simple DocBook DTD.

This book is designed to be the clear, concise, normative reference to
the DocBook DTD. This book is the official documentation for the
DocBook DTD. For printed copies, visit http://docbook.org/tdg/en/.

"Fairly crude PDF versions" (Norman Walsh) of Part I, Part II, and Part
III are included in this package.

A shell script to convert SGML documents based on the DocBook DTD.

For usage information read:

/usr/share/doc/packages/docbook-toys/README

The docbook-utils package is a set of a few small programs intended to
ease everyday use of technical documentation software based on the
DocBook DTD, either written in SGML or XML.

Tasks they currently accomplish are: * jw: convert SGML files to
other formats (HTML, RTF, PostScript, PDF)

* sgmldiff: detect the differences in markup between two SGML files

A framework for writing slides using the DocBook DTD.

A DTD in XML as an extension to DocBook XML and XSL stylesheets to
process it.

These are the XSL stylesheets for DocBook XML and "Simplified" DocBook
DTDs. Use these stylesheets for documents based on DocBook 4 and
earlier; they are not aware of the namespace feature.

The stylesheets transform DocBook documents into HTML, XHTML, Manpages,
XSL-FO (for PDF), and a few other formats.

XSL is a standard W3C stylesheet language for both print and online
rendering. For more information about XSL, see the XSL page at the W3C:
http://www.w3.org/Style/XSL/

A new tool based on Perl modules.

This package contains version 3.0 and 3.1 and an XML version. It is
suitable for writing technical documentation.

The documentation can be found in /usr/share/doc/packages/docbook_3.

DocBook is a schema. It is particularly well-suited to books and papers
about computer hardware and software (though it is not limited to these
applications at all). This package has SGML- and XML-DTD versions
included. Some versions of DocBook contain also a RELAX NG and W3C
Schema.

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A Web browser for Emacs implemented in Emacs Lisp.

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This package is not required for XEmacs, because the tools included
here are a part of the XEmacs package.

With these tools, an already running Emacs can be accessed externally,
for example, in order to edit a file or run a code in Emacs Lisp. This
way, there is no need to start a new Emacs each time another
application loads an editor.

Find hints at /usr/share/doc/packages/gnuserv/README.SuSE.

Bugowner

The GNU hello program produces a familiar, friendly greeting. It
allows nonprogrammers to use a classic computer science tool that would
otherwise be unavailable to them. Because it is protected by the GNU
General Public License, users are free to share and change it.

GNU hello supports many native languages.

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Document Type Definitions (DTDs) for HTML 2.0, HTML 3.2, HTML 4.0, and
HTML 4.01. This package also contains the documentation (located in
/usr/share/doc/packages/html-dtd).

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Zebra is a fielded free text indexing and retrieval engine with a
Z39.50 front-end. You can use any compatible, commercial, or freeware
Z39.50 client to access data stored in Zebra.

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Character entity sets for ISO 8879:1986.

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The package comes with a Perl script (livedtd.pl) that converts an SGML
or XML DTD (Document Type Definition) into an HTML document. The HTML
document is exactly the same text as the DTD but with "live" links that
let you navigate through the DTD.

Bugowner

LT XML is an integrated set of XML tools and a developers' tool kit,
including a C-based API.

The LT XML tool kit includes stand-alone tools for a wide range of
processing of well-formed XML documents, including searching and
extracting, down-translation (for example, report generation,
formatting), tokenizing and sorting.

For special purposes beyond what the pre-constructed tools can achieve,
extending their functionality and/or creating new tools is easy using
the LT XML API. Minimal applications require less than one-half page of
C code to express.

LT XML provides two views of an XML file; one as a flat stream of
markup elements and text; a second as a sequence of tree-structured XML
elements. The two views can be mixed, allowing great flexibility in the
manipulation of XML documents. It also includes a powerful, yet simple,
querying language, which allows the user to quickly and easily select
those parts of an XML document which are of interest.

Contains the DTD "Mathematical Markup Language" (MathML) Version 2.0,
W3C Recommendation 21 February 2001.

Bugowner

OpenJade, the follow-up to Jade by James Clark, is an implementation of
the ISO/IEC 10179:1996 standard DSSSL (Document Style, Semantics, and
Specification Language); pronounce it "dissl"--it rhymes with whistle.

It has back-ends for SGML, RTF, MIF, TeX, and HTML.

The parser, "nsgmls," and helper tools like "sgmlnorm," "spam,"
"spent," and "sx" are now included in the separate "opensp" package.

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