Hi, Am Dienstag, 21. September 2010 um 03:36:29 schrieb Yawar Amin: > You’re right that there is actually a program that transforms our source > XML files into browser-friendly HTML. I don’t have a script per se, I just > run the command directly (the following assumes you’re in the > guide/whatever-locale/ directory, e.g. guide/C/): > > xsltproc -o output_html/ ../../xsl/general-customization.xsl > gnucash-guide.xml > > A little explanation: output_html is a directory that will automatically be > created and filled with the output HTML. You can specify any name that > makes sense. ../../xsl/general-customization.xsl is a relative path to the > XSL stylesheet we are using to turn the raw input XML into the HTML we > want, and it has to be that exact name. > > At this point, the generated HTML guide will be in the output_html > directory, and you can open any of the files in there with your browser. > But the problem is you won’t be able to see any images–screenshots, icons, > etc. If that’s OK, you can ignore the next bit. If not, a quick fix is to > run: > > cd output_html > ln -s ../figures > ln -s ../../../stylesheet > > Now if you reload any page where you didn’t see any image before, it will > appear now. > > Note that when you’re ready to prepare your patch, you don’t want the > output_html directory to be mentioned anywhere in it, so delete it before > doing the patch: > > rm -rf output_html
Shouldn't this stuff be done somewhere by "make & make install"? Frank _______________________________________________ gnucash-devel mailing list gnucash-devel@gnucash.org https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel