<!-- This custom XSL tweaks the DocBook XML -> HTML settings to produce an OK-looking manual. --> <!DOCTYPE xsl:stylesheet [ <!ENTITY css SYSTEM "style.css"> ]> <xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" version='1.0'> <xsl:import href="http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current/html/docbook.xsl"/> <!-- Embed our stylesheet as the user-provided <head> content. --> <xsl:template name="user.head.content"><style>&css;</style></xsl:template> <!-- Remove the body.attributes block, which specifies a bunch of useless bgcolor etc. attrs on the <body> tag. --> <xsl:template name="body.attributes"></xsl:template> <!-- Specify that in "book" form (which we're using), we only want a single table of contents at the beginning of the document. --> <xsl:param name="generate.toc">book toc</xsl:param> <!-- Don't put the "Chapter 1." prefix on the "chapters". --> <xsl:param name="chapter.autolabel">0</xsl:param> <!-- Make builds reproducible by generating the same IDs from the same inputs --> <xsl:param name="generate.consistent.ids">1</xsl:param> <!-- Use <ul> for the table of contents. By default DocBook uses a <dl>, which makes no semantic sense. I imagine they just did it because it looks nice? --> <xsl:param name="toc.list.type">ul</xsl:param> <xsl:output method="html" encoding="utf-8" indent="no" doctype-public=""/> </xsl:stylesheet>