Annotation of doc/help/texxml2latex.pl, revision 1.9
1.1 bowersj2 1: #!/usr/bin/perl
2:
1.2 bowersj2 3: # The LearningOnline Network with CAPA
4: # Converts a texxml file into a single tex file
5: #
6: # Copyright Michigan State University Board of Trustees
7: #
8: # This file is part of the LearningOnline Network with CAPA (LON-CAPA).
9: #
10: # LON-CAPA is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
11: # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
12: # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
13: # (at your option) any later version.
14: #
15: # LON-CAPA is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
16: # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
17: # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
18: # GNU General Public License for more details.
19: #
20: # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
21: # along with LON-CAPA; if not, write to the Free Software
22: # Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
23: #
24: # /home/httpd/html/adm/gpl.txt
25: #
26: # http://www.lon-capa.org/
27: #
28: # 7-16-2002 Jeremy Bowers
29:
1.1 bowersj2 30: use strict;
31: use HTML::TokeParser;
32: use GDBM_File;
1.5 bowersj2 33: use File::Temp;
1.1 bowersj2 34:
35: # accept texxml document on standard in
36: my $p = HTML::TokeParser->new( $ARGV[0] );
1.4 albertel 37: my $dirprefix = "../../loncom/html/adm/help/tex/";
1.1 bowersj2 38:
1.5 bowersj2 39: # Make myself a temp dir for processing POD
40: my $tmpdir = File::Temp::tempdir('loncapahelpgenXXXXXXX', TMPDIR => 1);
41:
1.1 bowersj2 42: # Print the header
43: open (LATEX_FILE, $dirprefix . "Latex_Header.tex");
44: print <LATEX_FILE>;
45:
46: while (my $token = $p->get_token())
47: {
48: my $type = $token->[0];
1.5 bowersj2 49: if ($type eq 'S') {
1.1 bowersj2 50: my $tag = $token->[1];
51: my $attr = $token->[2];
1.5 bowersj2 52: if ($tag eq 'section') {
1.1 bowersj2 53: my $title = $attr->{'name'};
54: print "\\section{$title}\n\n";
55: }
56:
1.5 bowersj2 57: if ($tag eq 'subsection') {
1.1 bowersj2 58: my $title = $attr->{'name'};
59: print "\\subsection{$title}\n\n";
60: }
61:
1.5 bowersj2 62: if ($tag eq 'subsubsection') {
1.1 bowersj2 63: my $title = $attr->{'name'};
64: print "\\subsubsection{$title}\n\n";
65: }
66:
1.5 bowersj2 67: if ($tag eq 'file') {
1.1 bowersj2 68: my $file = $attr->{'name'};
1.9 ! bowersj2 69: open (LATEX_FILE, $dirprefix . $file) or
! 70: ($! = 1, die "Can't find LaTeX file $dirprefix/$file; terminating build.");
1.1 bowersj2 71: print <LATEX_FILE>;
1.3 bowersj2 72: print "\n\n";
1.1 bowersj2 73: }
74:
1.5 bowersj2 75: if ($tag eq 'tex') {
1.3 bowersj2 76: print "\n\n";
1.1 bowersj2 77: print $attr->{'content'};
1.3 bowersj2 78: print "\n\n";
1.1 bowersj2 79: }
1.5 bowersj2 80:
81: if ($tag eq 'pod') {
82: my $file = $attr->{'file'};
1.8 bowersj2 83: my $section = $attr->{'section'};
1.5 bowersj2 84: if (!defined($section)) { $section = ''; }
1.6 bowersj2 85: else {
1.8 bowersj2 86: $section = "-section '$section'";
1.6 bowersj2 87: }
1.8 bowersj2 88: my $h1level = $attr->{'h1level'};
89: if (!defined($h1level)) { $h1level = '2'; }
1.5 bowersj2 90: $file = '../../loncom/' . $file;
1.8 bowersj2 91: my $filename = substr($file, rindex($file, '/') + 1);
92: system ("cp $file $tmpdir\n");
1.9 ! bowersj2 93: my $latexFile;
! 94: if (index($filename, '.') == -1) {
! 95: # pod2latex *insists* that either the extension of the
! 96: # file be .pl|.pm|.pod or that it be executable. Some
! 97: # extension-less files like "lonsql' are none-of-the-above.
! 98: system ("cd $tmpdir; mv $filename $filename.pm");
! 99: $filename .= ".pm";
! 100: print STDERR $filename . "\n";
! 101: }
1.8 bowersj2 102: system ("cd $tmpdir; pod2latex -h1level $h1level $section $filename\n");
1.9 ! bowersj2 103: $latexFile = substr($filename, 0, rindex($filename, '.')) . '.tex';
! 104: open LATEX_FILE, $tmpdir . '/' . $latexFile or
! 105: ($! = 1, die "Latex file $latexFile not found while trying to use pod2latex, ".
! 106: "terminating build");
1.7 bowersj2 107: # pod2latex inserts \labels and \indexs for every section,
108: # which is horrible because the section names tend to get
109: # reused a lot. This filters those out, so we need to do
110: # create our own indexes.
111: for (<LATEX_FILE>) {
1.8 bowersj2 112: $_ =~ s/\\([^{]*)(section|paragraph)(\*?)\{([^\\]+)\\label\{[^\\]+\}\\index\{([^\\]+)\}\}/\\\1\2\3\{\4\}/g;
1.7 bowersj2 113: print $_;
114: }
1.5 bowersj2 115: print "\n\n";
116: }
1.1 bowersj2 117: }
118: }
119:
120: # Print out the footer.
121: open (LATEX_FILE, $dirprefix . "Latex_Footer.tex");
122: print <LATEX_FILE>;
1.5 bowersj2 123:
124: # Remove the temp directory
125: system ("rm -rf $tmpdir");
1.8 bowersj2 126:
127: __END__
128:
129: =pod
130:
131: =head1 NAME
132:
133: texxml2latex.pl - core script that drives the help file assembly
134: applications
135:
136: =head1 SYNOPSIS
137:
138: LON-CAPA's help system is based on assembling various pieces into
139: LaTeX files for conversion into printed documents. The various pieces
140: can also be used as online help.
141:
142: =head1 OVERVIEW
143:
144: X<help system, overview>LON-CAPA's help system is based on the idea of
145: assembling various pieces as needed to create documents for printing,
146: and using these various pieces for online help. LaTeX is the primary
147: language of the help system, because we can easily convert it to HTML,
148: and it makes the nicest printed documents.
149:
150: The scripts for the help system are stored in /docs/help in the CVS
151: repository.
152:
153: =head2 Data Sources
154:
155: The help system can draw from the following sources to create help
156: documents:
157:
158: =over 4
159:
160: =item * B<LaTeX fragments>: LaTeX fragments stored in
161: C</loncom/html/adm/help/tex> in the CVS repository (which end up in
162: C</home/httpd/html/adm/help/tex>). A "LaTeX fragment" is a file that
163: contains LaTeX-style markup, but is not a complete LaTeX file with
164: header and footer.
165:
166: =item * B<perl POD documentation>: POD documentation may be extracted
167: from perl modules used in LON-CAPA, using the syntax described in
168: podselect's man page.
169:
170: =back
171:
172: =head2 Online Help
173:
174: The online aspect of the help system is covered in the documentation
175: for loncommon.pm; see L<Apache::loncommon>, look for
176: C<help_open_topic>.
177:
178: Online help can only come from LaTeX fragments.
179:
180: Access to the printed documents is partially provided online by
181: rendering the help files structure in a way that allows the user to
182: click through to the underlying help files; see
183: L<http://msu.loncapa.org/adm/help/author.manual.access.hlp> for an
184: example. It's not very good, but it's marginally better then nothing.
185:
186: =head2 Offline Documents
187:
188: Offline documents are generated from XML documents which tell a
189: rendering script how to assemble the various LaTeX fragments into a
190: single LaTeX file, which is then rendered into PostScript and PDF
191: files, suitable for download and printing.
192:
193: =head1 texxml And Rendering texxml
194:
195: =head2 texxml
196:
197: X<texxml>
198: texxml is a little XML file format used to specify to the texxml2*.pl
199: scripts how to assemble the input sources into LaTeX documents. texxml
200: files end in the .texxml extension, and there is one texxml file per
201: final rendered document.
202:
203: The texxml format is as follows: There is a root <texxml> element,
204: with no attributes and the following children:
205:
206: =over 4
207:
208: =item * B<title>: The B<name> attribute of this tag is used as the
209: title of the document in texxml2index.pl; it is ignored in
210: texxml2latex.pl. If you don't intend to offer online-access
211: to the rendered documents this may be skipped.
212:
213: =item * B<section>, B<subsection>, and B<subsubsection>: These create
214: the corresponding environments in the output file. The B<name>
215: attribute is used to determine the name of the section.
216:
217: =item * B<file>: The C<name> attribute specifies a LaTeX fragment by
218: filename. The file is assumed to be located in the
219: C<loncom/html/adm/help/tex/> directory in the CVS repository. The
220: C<.tex> is required.
221:
222: =item * B<tex>: The contents of the B<content> attribute are directly
223: inserted into the rendered LaTeX file, followed by a paragraph
224: break. This is generally used for little connective paragraphs in
225: the documentation that don't make sense in the online help. See
226: C<author.manual.texxml> for several example usages.
227:
228: =item * B<pod>: The B<file> attribute specified a file to draw the POD
229: documentation out of. The B<section> attribute is a section
230: specification matching the format specified in the man page of
231: podselect. By default, all POD will be included. The file is
232: assumed to be relative to the C<loncom> directory in the CVS
233: repository; you are allowed to escape from that with .. if
234: necessary. The B<h1level> attribute can be used to change
235: the default depth of the headings; by default, this is set to 2,
236: which makes =head1 a "subsection". Setting this higher can allow
237: you to bundle several related pod files together; see
238: developer.manual.texxml for examples.
239:
240: =back
241:
242: texxml2latex.pl will automatically include C<Latex_Header.tex> at the
243: beginning and C<Latex_Footer.tex> at the end, to make a complete
244: document LaTeX document.
245:
1.9 ! bowersj2 246: =head2 Rendering texxml
1.8 bowersj2 247:
1.9 ! bowersj2 248: =head3 render.texxml.pl
1.8 bowersj2 249:
1.9 ! bowersj2 250: X<texxml, rendering>X<render.texxml.pl>The C<render.texxml.pl> script
! 251: takes a .texxml file, and produces PostScript and PDF files. The LaTeX
! 252: files will be given access to .eps files in the
! 253: C</loncom/html/adm/help/eps/> directory while rendering. Call it as
! 254: follows, from the C<doc/help> directory:
1.8 bowersj2 255:
256: perl render.texxml.pl -- author.manual.texxml
257:
258: substituting the appropriate texxml file.
259:
1.9 ! bowersj2 260: =head3 texxml2latex.pl
1.8 bowersj2 261:
1.9 ! bowersj2 262: X<texxml2latex.pl>texxml2latex.pl is a perl script that takes texxml in and assembles
1.8 bowersj2 263: the final LaTeX file, outputting it on stout. Invoke it as follows:
264:
265: perl texxml2latex.pl author.manual.texx
266:
267: Note that there is no error handling; if the script can not find a
268: .tex file, it is simply ignored. Generally, if a file is not in the
269: final render, it either could not be found, or you do not have
270: sufficient permissions with the current user to read it.
271:
1.9 ! bowersj2 272: =head3 texxml2index.pl
1.8 bowersj2 273:
1.9 ! bowersj2 274: X<texxml2index.pl>texxml2index.pl is a perl script that takes texxml in and assembles a
1.8 bowersj2 275: file that can be used online to access all the .tex files that are
276: specified in the .texxml file. For an example of how this looks
277: online, see
278: C<http://msu.loncapa.org/adm/help/author.manual.access.hlp>.
279:
280: =head2 texxml support
281:
282: There are a couple of scripts that you may find useful for creating
283: texxml-based help:
284:
1.9 ! bowersj2 285: =head3 latexSplitter.py
1.8 bowersj2 286:
1.9 ! bowersj2 287: X<latexSplitter.py>latexSplitter.py is a Python script that helps you seperate a
1.8 bowersj2 288: monolithic .tex file into the small pieces LON-CAPA's help system
289: expects. Invoke it like this:
290:
291: python latexSplitter.py monolithic.tex
292:
293: where C<monolithic.tex> is the .tex file you want to split into
294: pieces. This requires Python 2.1 or greater (2.0 may work); on many
295: modern RedHat installs this is installed by default under the
296: executable name C<python2>.
297:
298: Use the program by highlighting the desired section, give it a file
299: name in the textbox near the bottom, and hit the bottom button. The
300: program will remove that text from the textbox, and create a file in
301: the C<loncom/html/adm/help/tex/> directory containing that LaTeX. For
302: consistency, you should use underscores rather then spaces in the
303: filename, and note there are a few naming conventions for the .tex
304: files, which you can see just by listing the
305: C<loncom/html/adm/help/tex/> directory.
306:
307: The idea behind this program is that if you are writing a big document
308: from scratch, you can use a "real" program like LyX to create the .tex
309: file, then easily split it with this program.
310:
1.9 ! bowersj2 311: =head3 simpleEdit.py
1.8 bowersj2 312:
1.9 ! bowersj2 313: X<simpleEdit.py>simpleEdit.py is a python script that takes a .texxml file and shows
1.8 bowersj2 314: all the tex files that went into in sequence, allowing you to "edit"
315: the entire document as one entity. Note this is intended for simple
316: typo corrections and such in context, not major modification of the
317: document. Invoke it with
318:
319: python simpleEdit.py author.manual.texxml
320:
321: Make your changes, and hit the "Save" button to save them.
322:
323: =head2 texxml LaTeX Feature Support
324:
325: =head3 Cross-referencing
326:
327: LaTeX has a cross-referencing system build around labeling points in
328: the document with \label, and referencing those labels with \ref. In a
329: complete LaTeX document, there's no problem because all \refs and
330: \labels are present. However, for the online help, \ref'ing something
331: that is not in the current LaTeX fragment causes a TTH error when it
332: can't find the crossreference.
333:
334: The solution is to do the cross-references for TTH. When LON-CAPA is
335: installed, the C<rebuildLabelHahs.pl>X<rebuildLabelHash.pl> script
336: is executed, which extracts all the labels from the LaTeX fragments
337: and stores them in the C<fragmentLabels.gdbm>X<fragmentLabels.gdbm> hash.
338: The C<lonhelp.pm> handler then replaces \refs with appropriate
339: HTML to provide a link to the referenced help file while online. Thus,
340: you can freely use references, even in online help.
341:
342: =head3 Indexing
343:
344: LaTeX has a popular index making package called MakeIndex. LON-CAPA's
345: help system supports this, so you can create indices using the \index
346: LaTeX command. In perl POD files, use the X command. Note that in both
1.9 ! bowersj2 347: cases the index text is not included in the render, so the index must
! 348: be included in addition to the indexed text, and need not match the
! 349: indexed text precisely.
1.8 bowersj2 350:
351: =head1 Writing POD: Style
352:
353: Adopting a little bit from everybody who has included POD in their
354: documents to date, the help system is going to expect the following
355: format for POD documentation.
356:
357: The POD should start with a C<=head1> with the title C<NAME> (in caps
358: as shown). The following paragraph should extremely briefly describe
359: what the module does and contains. Example:
360:
361: =head1 NAME
362:
363: Apache::lonflunkstudent - provides interface to set all
364: student assessments point score to 0
365:
366: Next should be a C<head1> titled C<SYNOPSIS> which contains a
367: paragraph or two description of the module.
368:
369: =head1 SYNOPSIS
370:
371: lonflunkstudent provides a handler to select a student and set all
372: assignment values to zero, thereby flunking the student.
373:
374: Routines for setting all assessments to some value are provided by
375: this module, as well as some useful student taunting routines.
376:
377: Optionally, an C<OVERVIEW> section can be included. This can then be
378: extracted by the help system for the LON-CAPA subsystems overview
379: chapter. The overview should be a relatively high-level, but still
380: technical, overview of the module, sufficient to give the reader
381: enough context to understand what the module does, what it might be
382: useful for in other contexts, and what is going on in the code when it
383: is read.
384:
385: The remainder should be formatted as appropriate for the file, such
386: that discarding the NAME, SYNOPSIS, and OVERVIEW sections provides a
1.9 ! bowersj2 387: useful API overview of the module. This may be anything from an
! 388: elaborate discussion of the data structures, algorithms, and design
! 389: principles that went into the module, or a simple listing of
! 390: what functions exist, how to call them, and what they return, as
! 391: appropriate.
1.8 bowersj2 392:
393: Routines that are private to the module should B<not> be documented;
394: document them in perl comments, or, as is the style of the time, not
395: at all, as is appropriate.
396:
397: Method and function names should be bolded when being
1.9 ! bowersj2 398: documented.
! 399:
! 400: Literal string such as filename should be enclosed in
1.8 bowersj2 401: the C command, like this: C</home/httpd/lonTabs/>.
1.9 ! bowersj2 402:
! 403: Indexing can be done with the X command in perldoc, and should be used
! 404: as appropriate. Do not include X commands in the headings, the output
! 405: from pod2latex screws up some regexes in texxml2latex.pl.
1.8 bowersj2 406:
407: =cut
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