Hi David,
Although I have not yet checked, I believe the problem is that the content of the cells is not in a <para>. That is, your DocBook should look like:
<thead><row><entry><para>a1</para></entry><entry><para>a2</para></entry></row></thead> <tbody><row><entry><para>b1</para></entry><entry><para>b2</para></entry></row></tbody>
As for being able to produce professional looking tables, there is some work to do in setting up table column widths and borders properly. However, YMMV.
Cheers, Steve Ball On 01/03/2011, at 7:16 AM, David Hinds wrote: I'm trying to convert a very simple docbook file to WordML using the roundtrip XSL stylesheets. I'm having trouble with tables: all cell contents are missing after the conversion.
Here is my input document:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/doc\
book/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd"><article lang="en">
<table frame='all'><title>Sample Table</title>
<tgroup cols="2"> <colspec colname='c1'/><colspec colname='c2'/>
<thead><row><entry>a1</entry><entry>a2</entry></row></thead> <tbody><row><entry>b1</entry><entry>b2</entry></row></tbody>
</tgroup></table>
</article> This renders ok in HTML with:
xsltproc --path .../docbook-xsl/html -o test.html \
docbook.xsl test.xml
but with this:
xsltproc --path .../docbook-xsl/roundtrip -o test.wml \ --stringparam wordml.template template.xml \
dbk2wordml.xsl test2.xml
the cells in the resulting table are all empty, i.e. the resulting WordML looks like:
<w:tc> <w:tcPr> <w:tcW w:w="" w:type="dxa"/>
</w:tcPr> <w:p/> </w:tc>
I get the same result with either xsltproc or saxon. I am using docbook-xsl-1.76.1.
My long term goal is to be able to programmatically generate reports as templated, styled Word documents from asciidoc source files, with docbook as an intermediate format, in a linux environment. I need relatively few features: headers, body text, simple bullet lists, PNG images, and reasonably professional-looking tables (where that means I need control over column alignment and borders).
-- Dave
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