The DSSSL stylesheets (Section 4.2, Section 7.1.5) owe a lot to the DocBook Guide of the Debian Newbiedoc Project, Mandrake's manual-print.dsl file (see Customizing Document Production for a detailed description) and the DBTeXMath method. Also, the CSS file for DocBook, ck-style.css, got important elements from the Newbiedoc CSS file for DocBook and Mark Pilgrim's influential dive into Accessibility.
RefDB gave me a real solution to my bibliography problem (see Section 5.19, Section 7.1.10).
Part of Section 5.1 is taken from the LyX Tutorial, section 2.2 (“Environments”).
Part of Section 3.9 is taken from the lynx manpage.
The introduction text to Section 6.3 is taken from the TeX FAQ item on How to approach errors. The material in Section 6.3.1 is taken from the TeX FAQ item on the structure of TeX errors. Section 6.3.4 contains material from the TeX FAQ item on the fatal format file error.
The description of the common LaTeX error messages and warnings in Section 6.3.2 uses material from the chapter on “ LyX and LaTeX errors” of the Extended Features manual for LyX, available from LyX' Help menu.
Many other sources have been used for this work. See Chapter 14 for some of them. Although not all of them are present in Chapter 14, they are all quoted at the aproppriate place inside the document. Please follow the links given there.
Figure 7-1 is taken from W3C's working draft CSS3 Paged Media Module, version of Dec. 18th 2003 and is Copyright © 2003 W3C (MIT, ERCIM, Keio), All Rights Reserved. Used with permission according to W3C document licence.
The CSS file for DocBook that is used in this document , ck-style.css, uses QBullets in links. See Section 7.1.8 on how to do this. Thanks to Matterform Media for providing QBullets for free. If you plan to use them on your website, please observe the QBullets usage terms.
The examples for admonition in the Conventions Section (Section 1.7) were taken from the Section on admonitions of the DocBook Guide of the Debian Newbiedoc Project.
The method I present is an original work of mine, that arouse out of the desire to “write once, create many” (see how it all started in my Jade installation notes and how it ended in Section 5.21). I wanted to have a document processing chain with all the bells and whistles, including the ability to process Mathematics (Chapter 10), bibliography (see Section 5.19) and Index (see Section 5.20), controlled from one source and one click of a button. My solution uses many well-known methods and packages, but the “glue” is original.
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