1. Table of Contents and Cross-Reference Plugin
This topic describes the facilities provided by the TOC TWiki Plugin for the support of documentation generation. The extensions support definition of an order among the topics in the web for the generation of tables of contents, together with cross-references that operate within, as well as between, topics.1.1. Installation and Configuration
Installation of the Plugin is straightforward. Simply unpack the tar file at the top level of your TWiki installation.1.1.1. The WebOrder special topic
The documentation extensions depend on the existance of a special
topic called WebOrder, which is is analagous to a Framemaker
"book". This topic should contain a list of the topics you want
included. This list must be formatted as a TWiki-format bulleted list
e.g.
* PageOne * [[Page two]]Both
WikiWords
and [[Odd Wiki Words]] may be used to refer to topics.
NOTES
- The WebOrder can contain any other TWiki or HTML formatting but it should be noted that all TWiki-format list bullets in the topic are taken as part of the ordering list.
1.2. Attributes on documentation tags
Following the TWiki standard, attributes are used to pass values to tags to control their behaviour. Attributes are given as a list ofname = value pairs enclosed in curly braces {} after the tag
name. For example:
%REF{type=Figure,topic="SpidersOfTheWorld",name="The Funnel Web"}%
NOTES
- Attribute values that contain only no spaces or punctuation need not be quoted, but values containing punctuation or white space must be protected by double quotes. You are highly recommended to stick to values that don't require quoting! All attribute names and values are case sensitive.
1.3. Sections and Tables of Contents
1.3.1. Creating sections using the SECTION tag
Supported attributes: name Subsections may be inserted in any topic using the
SECTIONn tag,
where n is the required subsection level. The heading of the section
is taken as all text after the tag up to the end of line. For example,
the heading at the top of this section is marked with
%SECTION1{name=SECTION}% Creating sections using the =SECTION= tag
NOTES
- See also 1.5. Getting clever for information about modifying section numbering from the WebOrder topic.
- Sections do not have to be named, but if they are not then they can only be referred to by knowing the exact section number. Section names must be unique within the topic.
- The only way to close a section is to start a new section with a different level, or to end the topic.
- You can still use standard HTML heading tags such as <H1>, but sections marked this way will not be included in the table of contents.
1.3.1.1. The %SECTION0% tag
If a %SECTION0% tag occurs in a topic, the heading of that section will replace the topic name in the table of contents. NOTES- The
nameattribute cannot be used to refer to a %SECTION0% tag.
1.3.2. Building the table of contents; the %TOC% tag
Supported attributes: depth topic
You can build a table of contents by inserting
%CONTENTS%in a topic. The first level of the table of contents is normally the topics in the order of the list in WebOrder, though see 1.5. Getting clever for information about modifying section numbering from the WebOrder topic. Subsections listed in the table are automatically linked to the target
SECTION.
- The
topicattribute may be used to generate a table of contents for just one topic. - The
depthattribute may be used to set the maximum number of levels to generate.
1.3.2.1. Output from %CONTENTS{depth=2}% tag for this web
1.3.2.1.A Table of contents for this web1.3.2.2. Output from %CONTENTS% tag for this topic
- 1. Table of Contents and Cross-Reference Plugin
- 1.1. Installation and Configuration
- 1.2. Attributes on documentation tags
- 1.3. Sections and Tables of Contents
- 1.4. Anchors and References - the
ANCHOR,REFandREFTABLEtags - 1.5. Getting clever
- 1.6. Hints and Tips
- 1.7. Further development
- 1.8. Copyright
- 1.9. License
1.3.3. The TOCCHECK tag
Supported attributes: none
Any topic (but most usually the WebOrder topic) may include the
%TOCCHECK%tag. This causes the entries in the WebOrder topic to be cross-referenced against the files actually stored in the web (see WebIndex?). Any topics which exist as files in the web but are missing from the WebOrder will be listed. NOTES
- Any topics that begin with the characters "Web" are special topics and are excluded from the list, though they can still be listed in the WebOrder and will appear in the table of contents.
1.3.3.1. Output from the %TOCCHECK% tag for this web
1.3.3.1.A Output of the%TOCCHECK% tag
1.4. Anchors and References - the ANCHOR, REF and REFTABLE tags
Bookmarks and references can be inserted into text using the ANCHOR
and REF tags. These can be used for references, for example, to tables
or figures.
NOTES
- Anchors and references only work within the current web; they cannot be used to create references between webs.
1.4.1. The ANCHOR tag
Supported attributes: type name display
The ANCHOR tag creates a jump target suitable for jumping to from
somewhere else. The type adds the anchor to a "group"; this group is
required when generating a reference to the anchor, and may be used to
generate tables of same-type anchors (see
1.4.3. The REFTABLE tag below). The type can be any name,
though convention suggests the use of types such as Figure and
Table. The special group Section is used internally to refer to
sections and subsections. Avoid using it for an ANCHOR or you may
see strange results.
The ANCHOR tag is normally visible in the output, though it may be
made invisible by setting the display attribute to no . For
example:
%ANCHOR{type=Figure,name=A,display=no}% Here be sea
monsters will generate an invisible anchor on the text (there's
one one the line above, honest!) and
<A name="#Figure_A"> </A>
%ANCHOR{type=Table,name=A}% A wooden table
will generate:
1.4.1.A A wooden table
All the text between the anchor and the next end-of-line will be
used to create the anchor. If the anchor is invisible, this text will
be invisible too.
1.4.2. The REF tag
Supported attributes: type topic name
The REF tag may be used to refer to an anchor. Anchors are
automatically inserted by SECTION tags or may be added using the
ANCHOR tag. For a REF tag to work, the type of the target must be
known. For example:
See %REF{type=Example,name=WebOrder}% for more information about WebOrder
will generate:
See 1.1.1.A The Weborder topic for more information about WebOrder
To refer to anchors in a different topic, use the topic attribute.
You can refer to sections by name by using the special type Section
e.g. %REF{type=Section,name=TOCCHECK}%.
If you refer to a non-existant anchor you are warned: for example,
%REF{type=Reference,name=NonExistantAnchor}%generatesReference TocPluginHelp:Reference:NonExistantAnchor not satisfied
1.4.3. The REFTABLE tag
Supported attributes: type
The REFTABLE tag can be used to build tables of references based on
the type assigned to anchors. For example, if you have a lot of
anchors of type Example you can build a table of all these anchors
thus:
%REFTABLE{type=Example}%
This will insert a table like this:
%REFTABLE{type=Figure}%
will insert a table like this:
| Figure |
|---|
| 1.4.1.A Here be sea monsters |
- If you use
REFTABLEwith the typeSectionthe table will contain a list of all named sections. For example
1.5. Getting clever
It is possible to change the way the table of contents for the web is ordered by using extra levels of indent in the WebOrder. If you indent a topic below another topic, then that topic will be treated as a section of the parent topic. Section numbers within the subtopic are adjusted accordingly. For example, say the WebOrder contains* [[Top level topic]] * AnotherTopLevelTopicTopLevelTopic will be numbered 1., and the first
SECTION1 within TopLevelTopic will be 1.1. AnotherTopLevelTopic will be numbered 2. If, instead, WebOrder contains
* [[Top level topic]]
* [[Second level topic]]
* AnotherTopLevelTopic
TopLevelTopic will still be numbered 1., but now SecondLevelTopic will be numbered 1.1.,
and the first SECTION1 within SecondLevelTopic will be 1.1.1. The first SECTION1 within
TopLevelTopic will now be numbered 1.2. AnotherTopLevelTopic will still be numbered 2.
1.6. Hints and Tips
- The standard TWiki variable HTTP_EQUIV_ON_VIEW can be set in WebPreferences to define a style-sheet for the web, for example to apply corporate style quidelines to your documents.
- Include a %TOCCHECK% tag at the end of the table of contents topic.
- Name all sections. This makes it easier to refer to them by symbolic names rather than trying to REF numbered sections.
1.7. Further development
Further development of this Plugin is welcomed. It is recommended that you unpack the distribution into a development directory and use the supplied Ant http://jakarta.apache.org build file (twikitoc.xml) which includes targets to test and install your development code into a test installation.1.8. Copyright
The TOC Plugin is a development of the Architectures and Systems Platforms group of Motorola Inc. and is protected by the following copyrights:- Copyright (C) 2001 Motorola. All Rights Reserved.
1.9. License
As required for the publication of all extensions to TWiki, the software is published under the terms of the GNU General Public License. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details, published at http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html| 1. Table of Contents and Cross-Reference Plugin | 2. TocPlugin | ||||
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