View Single Post
Old 10-19-2010, 06:05 PM   #5
Manichean
Wizard
Manichean is the 'tall, dark, handsome stranger' all the fortune-tellers are referring to.Manichean is the 'tall, dark, handsome stranger' all the fortune-tellers are referring to.Manichean is the 'tall, dark, handsome stranger' all the fortune-tellers are referring to.Manichean is the 'tall, dark, handsome stranger' all the fortune-tellers are referring to.Manichean is the 'tall, dark, handsome stranger' all the fortune-tellers are referring to.Manichean is the 'tall, dark, handsome stranger' all the fortune-tellers are referring to.Manichean is the 'tall, dark, handsome stranger' all the fortune-tellers are referring to.Manichean is the 'tall, dark, handsome stranger' all the fortune-tellers are referring to.Manichean is the 'tall, dark, handsome stranger' all the fortune-tellers are referring to.Manichean is the 'tall, dark, handsome stranger' all the fortune-tellers are referring to.Manichean is the 'tall, dark, handsome stranger' all the fortune-tellers are referring to.
 
Manichean's Avatar
 
Posts: 3,130
Karma: 91256
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Germany
Device: Cybook Gen3
Quote:
Originally Posted by nusilver View Post
Well, I have no experience with XPath (and every time I try to use the wizards, I have no idea what to do), so when I say the TOC has chapter titles and page numbers, I mean exactly that. The point is to preserve the table of contents the way it existed on the printed page - the page numbers would be pointless other than for posterity.
That last point is what I don't understand. Doesn't that make the whole TOC kind of pointless?
As for the XPath, you open the wizard, identify what a chapter heading looks like and create the appropriate XPath expression to describe it. Unfortunately, I can't help you any more than linking to this, because I've never used XPath myself.
Manichean is offline   Reply With Quote