Hans Hagen schrieb am Mi., 15. Mai 2019, 18:32: > On 5/15/2019 4:35 PM, Denis Maier wrote: > > Our workflow is not settled yet; we're still discussing options. All > > depends upon what is possible ... > > > > That being said, for the purpose of displaying the articles online we'll > > need every article in a separate XML file. The question is if and how we > > will produce a PDF version containing a whole volume (we'll probably > > need one PDF for the whole volume and also PDFs for each article). > > > > One option would be: > > - merge the articles into a single XML, > > - typeset from there > > - split the PDF > > (Hence my question here, > > https://mailman.ntg.nl/pipermail/ntg-context/2019/095011.html). > > you can create a master xml file with includes and process the lots in > one go ... this is quite convenient when you assemble for instance books > from chapters that are split into sections ... you can make a xml file > per chapter that includes the sections and then a book file that loads > them all ... files can have a processing instruction telling what styel > to load and you can run individual files or assemblies ... all the stuff > needed to do that is there (and probably also documented someplace) > Ok. Sounds good. How can I call the style in the xml files? I know that I can process a file with \xmlprocessfile or call it from the command line with --env=, and in a normal tex-file I could obviously use \environment for this, but how does this work with xml? > anyway, you can always save '\lastpage' during a run ... or you can have > some shared lua file with chapters/pagenumbers that gets updated by the > current run > > all this is workflow dependent but all can be done without too much hassle > > (fwiw: we have some cases where for one projects hundreds of xml files > get merged runtime and then processed ... the overhead is neglectable to > the run) > > > Another option could be: > > - Typeset each article individually. > > - Get the last page number => in the next article, set the first page > > number to this + 1 > > (So, we do not necessarily need to write the page numbers back to the > > XML, but we'll somehow need to pass the page number to the next article > > in the chain.) > > > > > > Am Mi., 15. Mai 2019 um 14:46 Uhr schrieb Hans Hagen > >: > > > > On 5/15/2019 12:57 PM, Denis Maier wrote: > > > Hmm, getting the page number back from the tuc file sound > > feasible. I'll > > > have to look into this. > > > > > > But how would I write the information back to the XML? Is this > > explained > > > somewhere? > > all depends on the workflow ... why does it need to be written back? > > > > > > ----------------------------------------------------------------- > > Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE > > Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands > > tel: 038 477 53 69 | www.pragma-ade.nl > > | www.pragma-pod.nl > > > > ----------------------------------------------------------------- > > > > > -- > > ----------------------------------------------------------------- > Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE > Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands > tel: 038 477 53 69 | www.pragma-ade.nl | www.pragma-pod.nl > ----------------------------------------------------------------- >