Amaya enables you to handle document collections. Such a collection may, for example, represent a technical documentation made up of several web pages. The present manual is a document collection.
One of the web pages in the collection contains the title of the entire
documentation (an h1 element), an introduction (some other
elements), and a list ol or ul whose items
li contain links to each chapter. Chapters are separate
documents that can have a similar structure.
This organization is useful for browsing, but has several drawbacks when the entire documentation has to be printed.
Amaya addresses this problem with the Tools/Make book
command, which assembles a document collection into a single volume. You use
typed links for linking chapters, by associating an attribute
rel="chapter" or rel="subdocument" with the anchor
that refers to a chapter (create a link and use the
Attributes tool for the rel attribute).
Each referred chapter or sub-document may be:
To refer to a document subset, you usually define a div
element to identify the part of the document you want to include, and you
create a link to this div element.
Then, when you activate the Tools/Make book command, all
blocks (li elements in the above example) containing a typed
link to a chapter will be replaced by the corresponding actual web pages (or
a part of it), and Amaya will display a unique document containing the whole
collection:
body element of the target document.a element), Amaya
includes the content of the anchor, but not the anchor itself.Before each replacement, the Make book command generates
a new div element with an id attribute to clearly
separate each included piece.
Pieces of the new generated document may contain normal links, target
anchors, and target elements. During the Make book
operation, Amaya ensures that each name and id
attribute value remains unique in the new document. Amaya changes these
values ss needed, and updates all relative links.
Amaya automatically transforms external links referring to external
documents or to document parts, into internal links to the part that are now
included. For example, if the link originally pointed to an external
document, the link will now refer to the div element generated
by the Make book command. This ensures that all links are
preserved in the new unique document containing the whole collection.
This large document can then be numbered and printed with a complete table of contents and a list of all links.