- From: Phillip Lord <phillip.lord@newcastle.ac.uk>
- Date: Tue, 07 Oct 2014 15:49:28 +0100
- To: "Peter F. Patel-Schneider" <pfpschneider@gmail.com>
- Cc: Luca Matteis <lmatteis@gmail.com>, Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org>, "Daniel Schwabe" <dschwabe@inf.puc-rio.br>, W3C Semantic Web IG <semantic-web@w3.org>, W3C LOD Mailing List <public-lod@w3.org>, Eric Prud'hommeaux <eric@w3.org>, Bernadette Hyland <bhyland@3roundstones.com>
"Peter F. Patel-Schneider" <pfpschneider@gmail.com> writes: >>>> tex4ht takes the slight strange approach of having an strange and >>>> incomprehensible command line, and then lots of scripts which do default >>>> options, of which xhmlatex is one. In my installation, they've only put >>>> the basic ones into the path, so I ran this with >>>> /usr/share/tex4ht/xhmlatex. >>>> >>>> >>>> Phil >>>> >>> >>> So someone has to package this up so that it can be easily used. Before then, >>> how can it be required for conferences? >> >> http://svn.gnu.org.ua/sources/tex4ht/trunk/bin/ht/unix/xhmlatex > > Somehow this is not in my tex4ht package. > > In any case, the HTML output it produces is dreadful. Text characters, even > outside math, are replaced by numeric XML character entity references. So, I am willing to spend some time getting this to work. I would like to plug some ESWC papers into tex4ht, to get some HTML which works plain and also with Sarven's templates so that it *looks* like a PDF. Would you be willing to a) try it and b) give worked and short test cases for things that do not work? Phil
Received on Tuesday, 7 October 2014 14:49:56 UTC