This is the mail archive of the
docbook-apps@lists.oasis-open.org
mailing list .
Re: DOCBOOK: how to... postscripize
- From: carlos at cvc dot edu (Carlos)
- To: Massimiliano Cialdi <cialdi at firenze dot net>,"docbook-apps at lists dot oasis-open dot org" <docbook-apps at lists dot oasis-open dot org>
- Date: Thu, 24 Jan 2002 16:39:12 -0800
- Subject: DOCBOOK-APPS: Re: DOCBOOK: how to... postscripize
The errors indicate that the catalog file is incorrectly set up. I'm copying
this reply back to the list where other people may be able to help you
betters.
Carlos
On 01/23/02 1:02, "Massimiliano Cialdi" <cialdi@firenze.net> wrote:
> Carlos Araya wrote:
>
>> Personally, I like XSLTproc (http://www.xmlsoft.org) and fop
>> (xml.apache.org/fop). That would allow you to create PS files off docbook
>> documents.
>>
>> You also need the Docbook dtd (http://www.oasis-open.org/) and the
>> stylesheets (http://sourceforge.net/projects/docbook/)
>
> I also have a debian woody.
>
> I have installed
> docbook 4.1-6
> docbook-dsssl 1.74b-1
> docbook-utils 0.6.9-7
> docbook-xml 4.1.2-8
>
> but if I run docbook2ps on bookindex.xml it gives me a lot of error like
> Using catalogs: /etc/sgml/catalog
> Using stylesheet:
> /usr/share/sgml/docbook/utils-0.6.9/docbook-utils.dsl#print
> Working on: /home/cialdi/doc/bookindex.xml
> jade:/home/cialdi/doc/bookindex.xml:10:0:E: DTD did not contain element
> declaration for document type name
> jade:/home/cialdi/doc/bookindex.xml:12:5:E: element "book" undefined
> jade:/home/cialdi/doc/bookindex.xml:13:12:E: there is no attribute "id"
>
>
> could you help me
>
> thanks
--
Carlos E. Araya
---+ WebCT Administrator/Trainer
P | California Virtual Campus
- | C/O De Anza College
G | 21250 Stevens Creek Blvd
---+ Cupertino, CA 95014
email carlos@cvc.edu
web http://www.cvc1.org/ (work)
http://www.silverwolf-net.net (personal)
phone 408 257 0420 (work)
PGP Fingerprint: E629 5DFD 7EAE 4995 E9D7 3D2F 5A9F 0CE7 DFE7 1756
80/20 Rule: Simplicity vs. complexity. 80 percent of the
functionality/feature set of an "ideal" solution set, with only 20 percent
of the complexity of the ideal solution or 20 percent of the effort required
to build the ideal solution; or put another way, the last 20 percent of the
"ideal" feature set is what creates the most complexity