Adobe 65030365 Developer's Guide - Page 424

implied value is, Examples, See also

Page 424 highlights

26 i m p l i e d v a l u e i s Examples • If you know that a markup document should always correspond to a FrameMaker book and that individual files in the book should start when the document reaches a toc or chapter element, you can use this rule: reader generate book { put element "toc" in file; put element "chapter" in file "ch.doc"; } With this rule, FrameMaker creates a book for each markup document. In a markup document, FrameMaker starts a new book component when it encounters a toc or chapter element. For the first toc element, FrameMaker uses the filename toc1 unless a file of that name already exists in the directory it is using. It continues that book component until it encounters either another toc element or a chapter element. At that point, it starts a new book component. It tries to put the first chapter element in a file called ch1.doc. • Assume that a markup document whose highest-level element is either manual or book should correspond to a FrameMaker book and any other markup document should correspond to an individual FrameMaker document. Further assume that the books created from manual and book elements should have new files for each instance of the elements chapter, front, or toc. To accomplish all this, you can use this rule: reader generate book for doctype "manual", "book" { put element "chapter" in file "ch.doc"; put element "front" in file; put element "toc" in file "$(bookname).toc"; } With this rule, FrameMaker asks you for a name for the book file if you open a markup document with manual as its document type. If you specify myfile.bk as its name, and the document contains two chapter elements, one front element, and one toc element, FrameMaker creates the following files: myfile.bk, ch1.doc, ch2.doc, front, and myfile.toc. See also Related rules "output book processing instructions" on page 447 General information Chapter 24, "Processing Multiple Files as Books" on this topic implied value is Use the implied value is rule to specify default attribute values in your EDD to correspond with imported elements that specify no value for the attribute. For example, assume your DTD declares an element named list, which has an attribute named style Read/Write Rules Reference 406

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Read/Write Rules Reference
406
implied value is
26
Examples
If you know that a markup document should always correspond to a FrameMaker book
and that individual files in the book should start when the document reaches a
toc
or
chapter
element, you can use this rule:
reader generate book {
put element "toc" in file;
put element "chapter" in file "ch.doc";
}
With this rule, FrameMaker creates a book for each markup document. In a markup
document, FrameMaker starts a new book component when it encounters a
toc
or
chapter
element. For the first
toc
element, FrameMaker uses the filename
toc1
unless a file of that name already exists in the directory it is using. It continues that book
component until it encounters either another
toc
element or a
chapter
element. At that
point, it starts a new book component. It tries to put the first
chapter
element in a file
called
ch1.doc
.
Assume that a markup document whose highest-level element is either
manual
or
book
should correspond to a FrameMaker book and any other markup document should
correspond to an individual FrameMaker document. Further assume that the books
created from
manual
and
book
elements should have new files for each instance of the
elements
chapter
,
front
, or
toc
. To accomplish all this, you can use this rule:
reader generate book for doctype "manual", "book"
{
put element "chapter" in file "ch.doc";
put element "front" in file;
put element "toc" in file "$(bookname).toc";
}
With this rule, FrameMaker asks you for a name for the book file if you open a markup
document with
manual
as its document type. If you specify
myfile.bk
as its name, and
the document contains two
chapter
elements, one
front
element, and one
toc
element, FrameMaker creates the following files:
myfile.bk
,
ch1.doc
,
ch2.doc
,
front
, and
myfile.toc
.
See also
implied value is
Use the
implied value is
rule to specify default attribute values in your EDD to
correspond with imported elements that specify no value for the attribute. For example,
assume your DTD declares an element named
list
, which has an attribute named
style
Related rules
“output book processing instructions” on page 447
General information
on this topic
Chapter 24, “Processing Multiple Files as Books”