diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'kpilot/conduits/docconduit/bmkSpecification.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | kpilot/conduits/docconduit/bmkSpecification.txt | 199 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 199 deletions
diff --git a/kpilot/conduits/docconduit/bmkSpecification.txt b/kpilot/conduits/docconduit/bmkSpecification.txt deleted file mode 100644 index f8a68d961..000000000 --- a/kpilot/conduits/docconduit/bmkSpecification.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,199 +0,0 @@ -KPilot PalmDoc Conduit bookmark Specification -============================================= - -(c) 2003 Reinhold Kainhofer, [email protected] - -This document is licensed under the FDL (Free Documentation License) -as published by the FSF. Any version of the FDL can be applied -at your convenience. - - - - -The PalmDoc conduit has three ways to indicate bookmarks for a text: - -) Inline tags of the form <* bookmarkname *> - -) Endtags of the form <bookmarkname> at the end of the document - -) Regular expressions in a separate textname.bmk file - (textname.bmk ist the filename of the text with the .txt replaced by .bmk) - - -In the design of the .bmk file, I tried to stay close to the -syntac of MakeDocJ bookmark files, but it turned out that I -needed to extend the syntax a little. Also, MakeDocJ uses Java -RegExps, while the PalmDoc conduit uses the QRegExp, which have -some slight differences (especially concerning the ^ and $ -patterns as well as backreferences). So if you used MakeDocJ, -the .bmk file syntax will be quite familiar, but you will still -have to adapt your bookmark files for Qt regular expressions -instead of Java regular expressions - - - -1) INLINE TAGS - -Whenever a tag of the form <* someText *> appears in the text, -this sequence is removed from the text, and a bookmark is set -there with the bookmark name "someText" (the part between the -<* and the *>). - - -2) ENDTAGS - -If the text ends with tags of the form <someText>, the string -in braces is used as bookmark name, and wherever it appears in -the text, a bookmark is set. -After the > any number of whitespace is allowed, but no other -characters like letters, numbers, or punctuation. Also, inside -the braces no line break must occur. The conduit searches the -text from the end and if it finds a line break inside a <...> -sequence, the tag and everything before it is assumed to belong -to the text and doesn't form a bookmark tag. -Between endtags any number of whitespace (spaces, tabs, line -feeds etc.) is allowed. - -As an example, assume you have a text ending in: -... the bad guy was punished, and they lived happily -ever after! -<Tag with -line feed> - <bad guy> <princess> -<married> - -The conduit starts at the end, ignores all whitespace between -the tags, so it finds the tags "married", "princess", and "bad guy". -The "Tag with line feed" has a line feed, so it is assumed to belong -to the text. -Assume now you have a text ending in: -... the bad guy was punished, and they lived happily -ever after! -<bad guy> The End <princess> -<married> - -Here, only "married" and "princess" are found as bookmarks. Because -of the letters before the "princess" tags, the search for the -bookmarks ends at the letter "d" of "The End" (the conduit starts -from the end and moves backward until it finds some text which -cannot be seen as a endtag. - - - - -3) REGULAR EXPRESSIONS IN A SEPARATE FILE - -This is by far the most complex way to specify bookmarks, but -it is also the mose powerful. -If you have a text with filename "My fairy tale.txt", the -bookmarks will be specified in a file called "My fairy tale.bmk" -(just the text filename with the .txt replaced by .bmk). This -file contains the bookmark definitions, one in each line. Lines -starting with a # are seen as comments, and empty lines are also -ignored. - - -In the .bmk file, each bookmark line has one of the following syntaces -(I will explain all fields later on). Fields in [..] are optional: - -bmkName -bmkPosition, bmkName -+, bmkPatternRegExp[, bmkNameAsString[, firstIncludedBmk[, lastIncludedBmk]]] -+, bmkPatternRegExp[, bmkNameIndexOfSubexpression[, firstIncludedBmk[, lastIncludedBmk]]] --, bmkPatternRegExp[, bmkNameAsString] --, bmkPatternRegExp[, bmkNameIndexOfSubexpression] - - If the first field is a string, it is used as the bookmark name -and pattern to search for. - If the first field is a number, it means the position of the -bookmark, and the second field is the name of the bookmark. - If the first field is either + or -, the second field gives -a regular expression that is used to find the position of the -bookmark. If the first field is a -, the search is done only -once and only the first match will be added as bookmark. If -the first field is a +, the search is done until the regular -expression can no longer be found (the fourth and fifth fields -can be used to include only a certain range of hits). If there -is a third field, and it is a string, it gives the name of the -bookmark as a regular expression (i.e. \1 are replaced by the -first subexpression of the search, where subexpressions are -specified by round brackets in the regexp of the second field). -If there is a third field, and it is a number, it gives the index -of the subexpression of bmkPatternRegExp that is used as the -bookmark name. -If there is no third field, the whole matched text will be used -as bookmark name. -The optional fourth and fifth fields can be used to set bookmarks -only after the first few ocurrences of the regexp in the text, and -to stop the search after the expression has been found a certain -number of times. - - - -If the PDB->PC sync is set up to store the bookmarks in a bookmark file, -it will create a file "My fairy tale.bm" (no "k") with entries of the form -position,bmkName -The .bmk file will be used if it exists, but if no .bmk file exists, the .bm file -will be used. This way you can override the bookmark settings, while -at the same time the PDB->TXT sync does not destroy your possibly -existing .bmk file. - - - -Examples: - -1) Imagine you have a line like: -frog princess -In this case, the text is searched for "frog princess", and a -bookmark is set whenever "frog princess" occurs in the text. -The name of each of these bookmarks will be "frog princess". - -2) A bookmark line: -55, Bookmark at offset 55 -Here, a bookmark will be set at offset 55 (55th character of -the text), and it will have the name "Bookmark at offs" (truncated -to 16 characters) - -3) A bookmark line --,Chapter \d+ -causes a bookmark to be set at the first ocurrence of "Chapter XXX", -where XXX denotes one or more digits. The bookmark name will be -"Chapter XXX" (XXX replaced by the actual digits). - -4) A bookmark line -+,Chapter \d+ -causes bookmarks to be set wherever "Chapter XXX" (XXX being one -or more digits) appears in the text. The bookmark name will again -be "Chapter XXX", but the search does not stop after the first hit. - -5) A bookmark line -+,\n\s*(Chapter \d+)\D+, 1 -causes a bookmark to be set whenever a new line starts with -"Chapter XXX" (whitespace is allowed before the "Chapter"), and -uses the first subexpression in (..) as the bookmark name. If you -have a passage - Chapter 15: here it starts -The regular expression will match, so a bookmark will be set there -and the subexpression "Chapter 15" (which matches the (Chapter \d+) ) -will be used as bookmark text. - -6) A bookmark line -+,\n\s*Part (\d+),\1\. part -sets a bookmark whenever a line starts with "Part XXX". The XXX -will be stored as the first matched subexpression. The third field -"\1\. part" is the regular expression for the bookmark name, where -\1 is replaced by the first matched subexpression of the search (XXX -in this case). So if a line starts with " Part 17: ", the bookmark -name will be "17. part". - -7) A bookmark line -+,Table (\d+): ,\1\. Tabelle,5,25 -will match whenever "Table XXX: " appears in the text, and the bookmark -name will be "XXX. Tabelle". However, the fourth field means that the -first four hits are ignored (the 5th hit is the first hit to be included -as a bookmark), and the fifth field means that all further hits after the -25th will be ignored, too. - -8) In law texts, I use a regular expression -+,\n *(�\.? *\d+[a-z]?\.?) +, 1 -to search for all paragraphs starting like "�. 15. " or " �23 ", and set -a bookmark there using only the part from the � to the last digit or the -full stop after the last digit (the pattern between the (), in our two -cases the bookmark names will be "�. 15." and "�23" ). |