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178 lines
9.9 KiB
Plaintext
178 lines
9.9 KiB
Plaintext
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The Official Supybot DocBook Metadocumentation
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(or, How Does One SGML File Turn Into All Those Document Formats?)
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Okay, though this isn't the case yet, ideally all of Supybot's documentation
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can and will be done using DocBook and DocBook-related tools as well as a few
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custom extensions that I've written.
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- How does DocBook work?
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First things first, you have to understand sort of how DocBook works in order
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to figure out how our documentation gets generated from just one file. What
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DocBook is, basically, is just a DTD (Document Type Definition). What that
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means is that it simply specifies how a document can be structured and still be
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considered a valid document by placing restrictions on what elements go where.
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It's a popular DTD because it is structured very well and it's not only fairly
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generic, but it also has nice elements that make documenting things (such as
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supybot) rather easy. It focuses on structure and content instead of
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presentation which is what makes it nice for writing things which are output
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format agnostic.
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So, let's say we've written a proper DocBook document, now what? Well, using
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an output formatting tool and a stylesheet, you create whatever form of output
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you want. What we use for producing the outptut is jade, and DocBook comes
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with a few stylesheets that work with that tool to create output formats like
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HTML and TeX. From the TeX file we produce a DVI (device independent) file
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with latex, and from that we produce the print formats of our documents, like
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PDF and Postscript using tools like dvips and dvipdfm.
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- What extra stuff do we do?
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Well, since our documents all have to do with an IRC bot, there are some very
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common things that we talk about a lot that we might like to format specially.
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For example, when we discuss a particular command for the bot we might like to
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have that text appear slightly different to emphasize the fact that it is
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special. So, for the commonly used items that weren't already covered by
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DocBook's DTD, I added elements into a new DTD which just extends DocBook's
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DTD. So now we have elements like <nick> and <channel> and <botcommand> that
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we can use for our documentation.
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Of course, now that we have used a DTD with more stuff in it (than DocBook),
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the stylesheets that DocBook provides won't do any special formatting for those
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new elements so we have to write new stylesheets as well. Once again I just
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extended the existing ones with formatting instructions on how to treat the new
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elements. So with this done, now our HTML and TeX (and whatever else) output
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will be properly formatted.
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- How do I make my own changes to the DTD and stylesheets?
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Primarily, you don't :) Ask me (Strike) first about it, and I will generally
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write them for you or explain a better way of doing things. This is especially
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true for the DTD, because that must remain consistent everywhere we write/read
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supybot docs based on it. The stylesheets are more lax and can be modified to
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produce whatever kind of output you wish.
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So, with that warning/reminder out of the way, here's how to modify each
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anyway. This doesn't really assume any knowledge of how to write a DTD, nor is
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it an exhaustive reference on writing one, so don't treat it as such. I'm
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basically just going to explain how to add extra elements that will play well
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with the DocBook DTD.
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-- Adding an element to the DTD
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If you've decided that there's a certain "thing" that's mentioned a lot in the
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documentation and deserves classification (for potential special formatting),
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you'll probably want to create a new element (or set of elements) for it. I'll
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walk you through how I added the "nick" element to our DTD (though many/most of
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the elements I added follow an identical process).
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The very first thing you need to figure out is: where in my document does this
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element "fit". That is to say, what elements should/can rightly contain this
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particular one? In the case of the "nick" element, it's basically always an
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inline-formatted deal that belongs in paragraphs for the most part. For those
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of you scratching your heads at that last sentence, perhaps thinking "okay, so
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how are we supposed to know what is relevant?" I say, "don't worry, I learned
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by example as well." Basically, I just looked through the DocBook DTD and
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figured out where things belong. Now, even if you don't know the DocBook DTD
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front-to-back, you can still peruse it to figure out where your new element
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belongs. Obviously, you should probably know *some* DocBook to figure out what
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each element means, but luckily all of our docs have been converted to DocBook
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and serve as nice examples of the usage of many elements :)
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Now, to figure out where something like "nick" belongs. In many ways, a nick
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is sort of like a variable name (at least in documentation usage). So, the
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element I chose to base it off of was "varname". If you have the DocBook DTD
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installed (as you should if you intend on making extensions to it), the varname
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element definition is contained in the dbpoolx.mod filename (in Debian, it's
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under /usr/share/sgml/docbook/dtd/4.2). How did I know this? Well, grep is
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your friend and mine too, and dbpoolx is the only filename that shows up when
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grepping for "varname" in the DocBook DTD directory. So, we open up dbpoolx.mod and search for varname. The first thing we find it in looks like this:
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<!ENTITY % tech.char.class
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"action|application
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|classname|methodname|interfacename|exceptionname
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|ooclass|oointerface|ooexception
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|command|computeroutput
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|database|email|envar|errorcode|errorname|errortype|errortext|filename
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|function|guibutton|guiicon|guilabel|guimenu|guimenuitem
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|guisubmenu|hardware|interface|keycap
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|keycode|keycombo|keysym|literal|constant|markup|medialabel
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|menuchoice|mousebutton|option|optional|parameter
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|prompt|property|replaceable|returnvalue|sgmltag|structfield
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|structname|symbol|systemitem|token|type|userinput|varname
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%ebnf.inline.hook;
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%local.tech.char.class;">
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Hmm, this doesn't look like a definition of varname (to me, but I sort of
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cheated by having read about DocBook before-hand ;)), but it will be important
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to remember for later. Let's try and find the element definition for varname
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(so, basically, let's look for the first line that starts with "<!ELEMENT ").
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The first line I come up with when I search is:
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<!ELEMENT varname %ho; (%smallcptr.char.mix;)*>
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Rather than write a separate tutorial for interpreting DTDs, I found a good
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SGML tutorial online that explains everything necessary to help you parse the
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DocBook DTD to figure out what the varname element really is, as well as to
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help you learn all the stuff necessary for what we will cover in creating our
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new nick element. That tutorial is at
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http://www.w3.org/TR/WD-html40-970708/intro/sgmltut.html#howtodtd (it's for
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reading the HTML DTD, but it applies to any DTD).
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So, now that we understand how to write/read things for a DTD, we arrive at the
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time where we can write the actual definition of our "nick" element:
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<!ELEMENT Nick - - ((%smallcptr.char.mix;)+)>
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As we learned in the above tutorial, this means that we are creating an element
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named "nick", which must have start and end tags, and is defined to contain one
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or more of whatever is in "smallcptr.char.mix". And rather than hunt through
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the DocBook DTD to figure out what that is, for now we'll just live with the
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fact that whatever can go into a DocBook varname can go into our new nick
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element. If you feel so inclined, feel free to try and define the content
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model for nick to only include valid nick characters. It's perfectly doable,
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and I'll probably do it at some point but I haven't yet.
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Since we're extending the DocBook DTD, I also decided that it'd be nice to
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follow the element creation conventions observed in their DTD, so there are a
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few more lines associated with our new nick element. All of them are related
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to the attributes of the element, and allowing for them to be extended by
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external DTDs (much like we are doing, only we aren't changing attributes of
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existing elements, just adding our own). The first one is:
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<!ENTITY % local.nick.attrib "">
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This basically defines an empty entity named local.nick.attrib which we will
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include so that if anyone chooses to extend the nick attributes, all they have
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to do is redefine local.nick.attrib.
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<!ENTITY % nick.role.attrib "%role.attrib;">
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To tell you the truth, I'm not entirely sure what this is for, but it follows the DocBook convention :)
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<!ATTLIST Nick
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%common.attrib;
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%local.nick.attrib;
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%nick.role.attrib;
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>
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This is, of course, our attribute list for our nick element. It consists of
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the two things we just defined as well as common.attrib which contains things
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like "id" and whatnot which all DocBook elements are expected to have.
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-- Extending the DocBook DTD to recognize new elements
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So, that's all you need to define your new element. But, we're not done just
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yet! We're almost there, we just need to make it so that it works with the
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existing DocBook elements, otherwise it's no good to us. Since we defined our
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element to esentially be the same as varname, it probably belongs at the same
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place within the DocBook schema as varname. Do you remember when we had that
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large entity definition that wasn't what we were looking for at the time though
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I said it'd be important later? Well, later is now. So, what that line tells
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us is what class of elements DocBook has varname in, which is
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"tech.char.class". And thanks to the DocBook convention of defining a
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local.<classname> entity that we can extend, all we have to do is redefine
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local.tech.char.class to contain "nick", and we are done.
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You may notice, however, that we don't actually put varname right into the
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local.tech.char.class entity, but instead we create our own
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supybot.tech.char.class class of elements that are supybot-specific (and are
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the equivalent of DocBook's tech.char.class elements) and instead, put all of
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those into the local.tech.char.class entity. Basically, we just go through one
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more level of indirection.
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