$Id: table.xsl,v 1.31 2003/06/05 20:05:15 bobstayton Exp $
Walsh
Norman
19992000
Norman Walsh
Formatting Object Table Reference
Introduction
This is technical reference documentation for the DocBook XSL
Stylesheets; it documents (some of) the parameters, templates, and
other elements of the stylesheets.
This is not intended to be user
documentation.
It is provided for developers writing customization layers for the
stylesheets, and for anyone who's interested in how it
works
.
Although I am trying to be thorough, this documentation is known
to be incomplete. Don't forget to read the source, too :-)
0
always
100%
auto
100%
auto
100%
No adjustColumnWidths function available.
1
0
bold
fixed
90deg
pt
always
before
center
after
Unexpected valign value:
, center used.
center
1
:
0:
0
:
1
1
1
1*
1
1
1
1*
Calculate an XSL FO table column width specification from a
CALS table column width specification.
CALS expresses table column widths in the following basic
forms:
99.99units, a fixed length specifier.
99.99, a fixed length specifier without any units.
99.99*, a relative length specifier.
99.99*+99.99units, a combination of both.
The CALS units are points (pt), picas (pi), centimeters (cm),
millimeters (mm), and inches (in). These are the same units as XSL,
except that XSL abbreviates picas "pc" instead of "pi". If a length
specifier has no units, the CALS default unit (pt) is assumed.
Relative length specifiers are represented in XSL with the
proportional-column-width() function.
Here are some examples:
"36pt" becomes "36pt"
"3pi" becomes "3pc"
"36" becomes "36pt"
"3*" becomes "proportional-column-width(3)"
"3*+2pi" becomes "proportional-column-width(3)+2pc"
"1*+2" becomes "proportional-column-width(1)+2pt"
colwidth
The CALS column width specification.
The XSL column width specification.
1*
proportional-column-width(
1.00
)
pc
pt
?