This is the command herold that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
herold - HTML to DocBook converter
SYNOPSIS
herold [OPTIONS]
DESCRIPTION
The reuse of HTML content in presentation-neutral form is a frequent problem. One possible
solution is to convert HTML to DocBook XML, because DocBook is a semantic markup language
for documentation, which enables its users to create document content that captures the
logical structure of the content. The command line tool herold can be used to convert HTML
to DocBook. Because HTML elements are often used not as intended, the possibilities for
such a transformation are somewhat limited. herold is part of the dbdoclet suite of tools.
For more information visit http://www.dbdoclet.org.
OPTIONS
--docbook-add-index, -x
Automatically add an index element at the end of the document.
--docbook-decompose-tables, -T
Decomposes the tables from the HTML code into single paragraphs. This can be useful,
if a document contains a lot of tables for formatting reasons.
--docbook-encoding, -d
Specifies the encoding of the generated DocBook XML files.
--docbook-root-element, -r
The root element of the document. Possible values are: book, article, reference, part,
chapter or section. The default value for this option is 'article'
--docbook-title, -t
The title for the resulting document.
--in, -i
Specifies the HTML input file.
--help, -h
Prints a help page on the console.
--html-encoding, -s
Specifies the encoding of the HTML source files, such as ISO-8859-1.
--out, -o
Specifies the DocBook XML destination file.
--profile, -p
A profile file with predefined settings.
--verbose, v
Enables the verbosity for the console output.
--version, -V
Displays the version of herold.
CONFIGURATION
The details of a transformation are controlled by a profile file. A profile file offers
more possibilities to influence the transformation than the command line arguments. The
following example shows a typical profile file.
transformation html2docbook;
section section-detection {
attribute-class = ["^MsoHeading(\d+)$"];
section-numbering-pattern = "((\d+\.)+)?\d*\.?\p{Z}*";
}
section list-detection {
itemized-attribute-class = ["^MsoListBullet(\w*)$", "Aufzhlung(\w+)$];
itemized-strip-prefix = [ "-", "o", "\u00b7" ];
ordered-attribute-class = ["^MsoListNumbered(\w*)$"];
ordered-strip-prefix = [ "\d+\.\s+" ];
}
section HTML {
encoding = "windows-1252";
exclude = [ "//p[starts-with(@class, 'MsoToc')]", "" ];
}
section DocBook {
abstract = """<title>Lorem ipsum</title>
<para>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed
do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut
enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris
nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in
reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla
pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in
culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.sed, dolor
amet.</para>""";
add-index = true;
author-email = "me@somewhere.de";
author-firstname = "Michael";
author-surname = "Fuchs";
collapse-protected-space = "true";
copyright-holder = "Ingenieurbüro Michael Fuchs";
copyright-year = "2012";
corporation = "";
create-condition-attribute = false;
create-prolog = true;
create-remap-attribute = false;
create-xref-label = false;
decompose-tables = false;
detect-trapped-br = true;
documentation-id = "doc01";
document-element = "book";
encoding = "UTF-8";
hyphenation-char = "soft-hyphen";
image-data-formats = [ "gif", "base64" ];
image-path = "./figures";
language = "de";
release-info = "Version 3.1";
table-style = "all";
title = "Tutorial";
title-normalize-space = true;
use-absolute-image-path = false;
}
Syntax
A profile file consists mainly of sections. Sections are used to group parameters which
share the same context. Every section must start with the keyword section followed by the
name of the section. After the name comes the block of parameters, which is surrounded by
curly braces. Parameters can be of type String, Number, Boolean or Array. Strings must be
framed with double quotes. If the String contains newlines, use three double quotes
instead of one. Arrays are framed with square brackets. Inside an array, the elements must
be comma separated. Every assignment must be finished by a semicolon. Multi line comments
have the form /* my comment */ , single line comments look like // my comment\n.
Mandatory Elements
A profile for herold must start with the line transformation html2docbook;.
Section section-detection
The section section-detection is used to detect section elements in HTML code and to strip
off any numbering prefix from the titles.
Many authoring tools allow deeply nested sections. While exporting HTML, it happens, that
the nesting becomes deeper than six levels. HTML provides header elements for up to six
levels, h1-h6, but no h7 or even more. At this point, the formatting is normally done with
the help of CSS and div or p elements. herold is able to detect the header element of
HTML, but it can not know about the export format of a specific tool. To solve this
problem even for some cases, you can specify the parameter attribute-class. It consists of
a list of regular expressions, which are matched against the class attribute of each HTML
element. If a match is found, the element is considered as a section element. The regular
expression can have group, which is interpreted as level indicator. The group must be the
first group and it must match against a number, e.g. ^heading(\d+)$. If the level can not
be detected, a level of seven is assumed.
Because DocBook XSL stylesheets take care of the section numbering while transforming the
DocBook XML to a specific output, it is often necessary to strip the numbering already
defined in the HTML page. Otherwise you end up with two numbering texts in front of your
titles. To help herold with the detection of numbering patterns, use the parameter
section-numbering-pattern.
attribute-class
A regular expression, which is applied to every p and div element. If the expression
matches, the current element is handled as a section element. If the regular
expression has groups, the first group will be used as nesting level, otherwise level
seven is assumed.
section-numbering-pattern
Normally you want to get rid of the section numbering that comes with the HTML data,
because it becomes part of the title text in DocBook. The section numbers will the
appear twice in your target media. One from HTML and one from the DocBook XSL
processing. The parameter section-numbering-pattern defines a regular expression,
which is matched against the beginning of every section title. If it matches, the
matching part is removed.
Section list-detection
Sometimes lists are not represented with ul, ol or dl tags, but they are represented as p
tags with additional css formatting. If you use a tool, which creates or exports HTML with
such a construct, the conversion will end up with para elements, instead of the
corresponding list elements in DocBook. To recreate the lists in some cases, you can use
the section list-detection. The parameters itemized-attribute-class and
ordered-attribute-class let you define lists of regular expression, which match against
listitems in the HTML. herold tries to rebuild the proper list structure from this
information, even for nested lists.
Section HTML
The section HTML defines parameters, which control the loading and parsing of the HTML
input data.
encoding
The character set used to read the input stream.
exclude
Defines an array of xpath expressions. All matches are removed from the HTML DOM tree
before transformation.
Section DocBook
abstract
The text for the abstract element of the info section. If the text is structured with
newlines, use three double quotes as delimiters. If the text starts with a "<"
character, it is embedded into an abstract element, otherwise the text is embedded
into an para element inside of an abstract element. The text will parsed and can
contain DocBook elements.
add-index
If set to true, an index element is inserted at the end of the DocBook XML.
create-xref-label
if set to false, anchor elements doesn't get a xreflabel attribute.
decompose-tables
If set to true, tables structures will be ignored. The content of the table cells will
be inserted into the DocBook XML as a sequence of paragraphs. This parameter can be
useful if your HTML contains tables for formatting purposes. Normally you want to get
rid of them, because they tamper the logical structure.
document-element
The document element you want to use. Must be one of article, book, part or reference.
encoding
The character set which will be used for writing the output file.
image-data-formats
An array of image formats. These formats will be inserted as imageobject elements,
additionally to the format found in the src attribute of the corresponding img
element. The original format is inserted twice with the roles "html" and "fo". The
other formats are inserted as "html-<FORMAT>" and "fo-<FORMAT>".
title
The title of the resulting document. If this parameter is undefined, herold tries to
dected the title from the head section of the HTML data.
use-absolute-image-path
If you want absolute image paths in the fileref attribute of the imagedata element,
set this parameter to true.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2001-2013 Michael Fuchs. License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later
http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html. This is free software: you are free to change and
redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
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