• The xfpt plain text to XML processor
  • Philip Hazel
  • 1. Introduction
  • 1.1 The xfpt command line
  • 1.2 A short xfpt example
  • 1.3 Literal and non-literal processing
  • 1.4 Format of directive lines
  • 1.5 Calling macros
  • 2. Flag sequences
  • 2.1 Flag sequences for XML entities and xfpt variables
  • 2.2 Flag sequences for calling macros
  • 2.3 Other flag sequences
  • 2.4 Unrecognized flag sequences
  • 2.5 Standard flag sequences
  • 3. Built-in directive processing
  • 3.1 The .arg directive
  • 3.2 The .eacharg directive
  • 3.3 The .echo directive
  • 3.4 The .endarg directive
  • 3.5 The .endeach directive
  • 3.6 The .endinliteral directive
  • 3.7 The .flag directive
  • 3.8 The .include directive
  • 3.9 The .inliteral directive
  • 3.10 The .literal directive
  • 3.11 The .macro directive
  • 3.12 The .nest directive
  • 3.13 The .nonl directive
  • 3.14 The .pop directive
  • 3.15 The .push directive
  • 3.16 The .revision directive
  • 3.17 The .set directive
  • 4. The standard macros for DocBook
  • 4.1 Overall setup
  • 4.2 Processing instructions
  • 4.3 Chapters, sections, and subsections
  • 4.4 Prefaces, appendixes, and colophons
  • 4.5 Terminating chapters, etc.
  • 4.6 URL references
  • 4.7 Itemized lists
  • 4.8 Ordered lists
  • 4.9 Variable lists
  • 4.10 Nested lists
  • 4.11 Displayed text
  • 4.12 Block quotes
  • 4.13 Revision markings
  • 4.14 Informal tables
  • 4.15 Formal tables
  • 4.16 Figures and images
  • 4.17 Footnotes
  • 4.18 Indexes