Quote:
Originally Posted by paperback
There is an "Insert inline TOC" feature, and this creates a special xhtml page. I'm wondering why the user is not able to create his/her own htm(l) page and automatically insert the TOC there, with the style rules for the TOC automatically added to the existing styles sheet?
Or is there a special advantage in having a separate xhtml page with its own inline styles?
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There is no real advantage to having the separate xhtml page but do you really want to create the links for the ToC manually when the computer is ready, willing and able to do the scut work? BTW, xhtml is the extension required for epub3 but most programs don't seem to care if you use htm, html, xhtml, whatever.
Personally, I use Sigil and it adds a stylesheet for the inline ToC which can be easily be merged into the main stylesheet or deleted since I have most of the entries already in my default stylesheet.