emacs-orgmode
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [Orgmode] Re: Custom entry IDs in HTML export


From: Sebastian Rose
Subject: Re: [Orgmode] Re: Custom entry IDs in HTML export
Date: Thu, 16 Apr 2009 22:50:43 +0200
User-agent: Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/23.0.92 (gnu/linux)

Carsten Dominik <address@hidden> writes:
> Hi Sebastian,
>
> On Apr 16, 2009, at 3:14 PM, Sebastian Rose wrote:
>
>> Hm - counter arguments?
>>
>> The only counter argument is, that hand made IDs for links are prone to
>> error. But that risk should be up to the user.
>
> Yes.  and during the export, I can actually check and throw a warning or an
> error if the same custom ID shows up twice.
>
>>
>> I actually changed my mind a little in this concern.
>>
>> If the user clicks a section link in the toc to jump to a section, he
>> can bookmark the page with exactly that jump target. If the jump target
>> (the ID) is human readable, the bookmark is more verbose.
>
> Yes, this is really the best application.  Also, when hovering over internal
> links, it is helpful if the link displays the human-readable  form.
>
>> Just one wish:
>>
>> The containers should reflect that change (HRID = human readable id):
>>
>> <div   id="outline-container-HRID">
>> <h4  id="HRID">                   headline    </h4>
>> <div id="outline-text-HRID">
>>    sections content...
>> </div>
>> </div>
>
>
> Sure, we can do this.  I would then add sec-xxx as one
> of the alternative anchors as well.
>
> However:  If I make the structure as you indicate above,
> do I understand correctly that the structure of a section without a
> human-readable id should be changed to this:
>
> <div   id="outline-container-sec-1.1">
> <h4  id="sec-1.1">                   headline    </h4>
> <div id="outline-text-sec-1.1">
>    sections content...
> </div>
> </div>
>
>
> Note the "sec-" which is added to the stuff that currently
> defines the structure.



I considered the `sec-' part of the automatic IDs.

In either case I'd have to adjust org-info.js. So why not go for the
human readable IDs without `sec-'?


Right now we have:

<div id="outline-container-2" class="outline-2">
<h2 id="sec-2"><span class="section-number-2">2</span> Things I want to find 
out </h2>
<div class="outline-text-2" id="text-2">

The `sec-' part is in the headlines ID only.



   Sebastian




>> That way the script would keep working with older pages.
>> Automatic IDs and human readable ones could be mixed.
>>
>>
>> The '<a id="">' anchors are scanned anyway, as are all jump targets in
>> the page.
>
> Yes, you implemented that some time ago, I remember.
>
>>
>> Maybe this is even the point to re-work the parser of org-info.js to
>> become independent of the TOC at all. The script could search for
>> headings instead. That's more work, but the script would then work for
>> all HTML pages with a structure similar to the org-export's one:
>
> So this would mean, we could read web pages with your java
> support even if those webpages were not created with Org?
> Pretty cool.
>
>> <div id=""><hx id=""></hx><div>content</div></div>
>>
>> but I could postpone this, if you fullfill my wish above.
>
>
> Best wishes
>
> - Carsten
>
>>
>>
>> Best wishes
>>
>> Sebastian
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Carsten Dominik <address@hidden> writes:
>>> On Apr 16, 2009, at 10:50 AM, Sebastian Rose wrote:
>>>
>>>> Carsten Dominik <address@hidden> writes:
>>>>> Hi Sebastian,
>>>>>
>>>>> I kind of like the idea to have a property that can be
>>>>> used to set an ID, as an alternative to the <<target>>
>>>>> notation.  Actually, using a property seems a lot cleaner,
>>>>> thanks for coming up with this idea, Daniel.
>>>>>
>>>>> I can also follow the reasoning that it is useful to have
>>>>> the table of contents link to the human-readable id, because
>>>>> it provides a general, simple workflow to retrieve a link that
>>>>> will persist through changes of the document.  This workflow
>>>>> was described also by Bernt earlier in this thread.
>>>>>
>>>>> Finally, I also agree that the main id in the <h3> tag
>>>>> should be the automatically generated one because this is
>>>>> best for automatic processing and because of all the arguments
>>>>> you have presented.
>>>>>
>>>>> Would it cause problems for org-info.js if the toc points to
>>>>> a user specified anchor in the headline, instead of the main
>>>>> ID that is inside the <h3> tag?  THis would really be the only
>>>>> required change.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I'll have to test this before I can give a final answer to this
>>>> question.
>>>>
>>>> But regardless of the results, I will adjust the script to reflect that
>>>> change. The script should not rule the HTML export and it will be an
>>>> easy thing to do.
>>>
>>> But I do want to hear any counter arguments you might have....
>>>
>>> - Carsten
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Sebastian
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> - Carsten
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Mar 30, 2009, at 1:49 PM, Daniel Clemente wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> El dv, mar 27 2009, Sebastian Rose va escriure:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> What we have now, just as Carstens said:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> # <<human-readable>>
>>>>>>> * Section B
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Creates this headline in HTML:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> <h2 id="sec-2"><a name="human-readable" id="human-readable"></
>>>>>>> a>2 Section B
>>>>>>> </h2>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> This is enough for all the use cases I can think of.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Yes, this is enough except for two things:
>>>>>> 1. The TOC still links to #sec-2 and the user can't change that
>>>>>> 2. Your syntax doesn't fold very well in the outliner. I mean: if you use
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> # <<human-readable>>
>>>>>>> * Section B
>>>>>>
>>>>>> then the comment appears at the end of the previous section, and you can
>>>>>> miss
>>>>>> it when you are viewing the heading „Section B“. I  would swap both lines
>>>>>> (solution 1):
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> * Section B
>>>>>>> # <<human-readable>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> But since there are already LOGBOOK drawers under the heading, it would 
>>>>>> be
>>>>>> a
>>>>>> lot clearer to use a property, like EXPORT_ID (solution 2):
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> * Section B
>>>>>>> :PROPERTIES:
>>>>>>> :EXPORT_ID: human-readable
>>>>>>> :END:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In this way, the TOC can reliably find the EXPORT_ID, and then generate:
>>>>>>> <h2 id="sec-2"><a name="human-readable" id="human-readable"></
>>>>>>> a>2 Section B
>>>>>>> </h2>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> (You could also leave *just* the human-readable id, but having two is not
>>>>>> bad.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I would prefer solution 1, but I don't because I'm not sure that the TOC
>>>>>> can
>>>>>> find the ID if it is written as a comment anywhere under  the heading 
>>>>>> (and
>>>>>> together with other things).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Solution 2 involves thus: a new property to specify the human-
>>>>>> readable entry ID, which will be used to link to the entry. The automatic
>>>>>> ID
>>>>>> (#sec-2) will still work for all entrys.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> * Distinguishing automatic and human readable IDs
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> One thing I like is, that we now _can_ distinguish the
>>>>>>> `human-readable-target' (human readable) from the `sec-2' (not human
>>>>>>> readable and not context related) using a regular expression.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> In org-info.js, I can now prefere the human readable ID in <a> from an
>>>>>>> automatic created one, and thus use that to create the links for `l'
>>>>>>> and `L'. The same holds true for other programming languages and
>>>>>>> parsers.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> If we open the <h3>'s ID for user defined values (bad), we can not
>>>>>>> distinguish those ID's using a regular expression and there is no way
>>>>>>> to detect the human readable one. There will be no way to _know_ that
>>>>>>> the <a>'s ID is the prefered one used for human readable links.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Solution 2 doesn't break the parsing techniques you use; in fact it can
>>>>>> also
>>>>>> make clearer which ID is the human readable one and which  one not.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This is not extremely important; just useful:
>>>>>> - for pages with many incoming links from external sites
>>>>>> - to ensure link integrity (now you can't assure that links will still
>>>>>> work
>>>>>> in
>>>>>> 1 year ... or in some weeks)
>>>>>> - to avoid that HTML visitors get directed to a wrong section and can't
>>>>>> find
>>>>>> what they searched
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Greetings,
>>>>>> Daniel
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>> Emacs-orgmode mailing list
>>>>>> Remember: use `Reply All' to send replies to the list.
>>>>>> address@hidden
>>>>>> http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Sebastian Rose, EMMA STIL - mediendesign, Niemeyerstr.6, 30449 Hannover
>>>> Tel.:  +49 (0)511 - 36 58 472
>>>> Fax:   +49 (0)1805 - 233633 - 11044
>>>> mobil: +49 (0)173 - 83 93 417
>>>> Email: address@hidden, address@hidden
>>>> Http:  www.emma-stil.de
>>>
>>
>> --
>> Sebastian Rose, EMMA STIL - mediendesign, Niemeyerstr.6, 30449 Hannover
>> Tel.:  +49 (0)511 - 36 58 472
>> Fax:   +49 (0)1805 - 233633 - 11044
>> mobil: +49 (0)173 - 83 93 417
>> Email: address@hidden, address@hidden
>> Http:  www.emma-stil.de
>

-- 
Sebastian Rose, EMMA STIL - mediendesign, Niemeyerstr.6, 30449 Hannover
Tel.:  +49 (0)511 - 36 58 472
Fax:   +49 (0)1805 - 233633 - 11044
mobil: +49 (0)173 - 83 93 417
Email: address@hidden, address@hidden
Http:  www.emma-stil.de




reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]