make.index.markup
boolean
make.index.markup
Generate XML index markup in the index?
Description
This parameter enables a very neat trick for getting properly
merged, collated back-of-the-book indexes. G. Ken Holman suggested
this trick at Extreme Markup Languages 2002 and I'm indebted to him
for it.
Jeni Tennison's excellent code in
autoidx.xsl does a great job of merging and
sorting indexterms in the document and building a
back-of-the-book index. However, there's one thing that it cannot
reasonably be expected to do: merge page numbers into ranges. (I would
not have thought that it could collate and suppress duplicate page
numbers, but in fact it appears to manage that task somehow.)
Ken's trick is to produce a document in which the index at the
back of the book is displayed
in XML. Because the index
is generated by the FO processor, all of the page numbers have been resolved.
It's a bit hard to explain, but what it boils down to is that instead of having
an index at the back of the book that looks like this:
A
ap1, 1, 2, 3
you get one that looks like this:
<indexdiv>A</indexdiv>
<indexentry>
<primaryie>ap1</primaryie>,
<phrase role="pageno">1</phrase>,
<phrase role="pageno">2</phrase>,
<phrase role="pageno">3</phrase>
</indexentry>
After building a PDF file with this sort of odd-looking index, you can
extract the text from the PDF file and the result is a proper index expressed in
XML.
Now you have data that's amenable to processing and a simple Perl script
(such as fo/pdf2index) can
merge page ranges and generate a proper index.
Finally, reformat your original document using this literal index instead of
an automatically generated one and bingo
!