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visual nitpicks fixed.


git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/xmlgraphics/fop/trunk@196773 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68
pull/30/head
Glen Mazza 21 years ago
parent
commit
7977d47910
1 changed files with 4 additions and 8 deletions
  1. 4
    8
      src/documentation/content/xdocs/embedding.xml

+ 4
- 8
src/documentation/content/xdocs/embedding.xml View File

@@ -359,8 +359,7 @@ XML access. This may be easier to understand for people familiar with JAXP.
<title>ExampleFO2PDF.java</title>
<p>
<fork href="http://cvs.apache.org/viewcvs.cgi/xml-fop/examples/embedding/java/embedding/ExampleFO2PDF.java?rev=HEAD">
This example
</fork>
This example</fork>
demonstrates the basic usage pattern to transform an XSL-FO
file to PDF using FOP.
</p>
@@ -370,8 +369,7 @@ file to PDF using FOP.
<title>ExampleXML2FO.java</title>
<p>
<fork href="http://cvs.apache.org/viewcvs.cgi/xml-fop/examples/embedding/java/embedding/ExampleXML2FO.java?rev=HEAD">
This example
</fork>
This example</fork>
has nothing to do with FOP. It is there to show you how an XML
file can be converted to XSL-FO using XSLT. The JAXP API is used to do the
transformation. Make sure you've got a JAXP-compliant XSLT processor in your
@@ -383,8 +381,7 @@ classpath (ex. <fork href="http://xml.apache.org/xalan-j">Xalan</fork>).
<title>ExampleXML2PDF.java</title>
<p>
<fork href="http://cvs.apache.org/viewcvs.cgi/xml-fop/examples/embedding/java/embedding/ExampleXML2PDF.java?rev=HEAD">
This example
</fork>
This example</fork>
demonstrates how you can convert an arbitrary XML file to PDF
using XSLT and XSL-FO/FOP. It is a combination of the first two examples
above. The example uses JAXP to transform the XML file to XSL-FO and FOP to
@@ -437,8 +434,7 @@ used. For more detailed information see other resources on JAXP (ex.
<title>ExampleObj2PDF.java</title>
<p>
<fork href="http://cvs.apache.org/viewcvs.cgi/xml-fop/examples/embedding/java/embedding/ExampleObj2PDF.java?rev=HEAD">
The last example
</fork>
The last example</fork>
here combines the previous and the third to demonstrate
how you can transform a Java object to a PDF directly in one smooth run
by generating SAX events from the Java object that get fed to an XSL

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