_generate-toc.scss

Style sheet module for the DTBook to PEF script for generating a table of content.

Use this style sheet by importing it in your custom SCSS style sheet:

@import "http://www.daisy.org/pipeline/modules/braille/dtbook-to-pef/_generate-toc.scss";

$toc-depth variable

The depth of the table of contents hierarchy to include. ‘0’ means no table of contents.

A table of contents will be generated from the heading elements present in the document: from h1 elements if the specified value for the depth is 1, from h1 and h2 elements if the specified value is 2, etc. The resulting table of contents has the following nested structure:

<list id="generated-document-toc">
  <li>
      <a href="#ch_1" title="Chapter 1">Chapter 1</a>
      <list>
          <li>
              <a href="#ch_1_1" title="1.1">1.1</a>
              ...
          </li>
          <li>
              <a href="#ch_1_2" title="1.2">1.2</a>
              ...
          </li>
          ...
      </list>
  </li>
  ...
</list>

Another one of these is generated but with ID generated-volume-toc. ch_1, ch_1_2 etc. are the IDs of the heading elements from which the list was constructed, and the content of the links are exact copies of the content of the heading elements. By default the lists are not rendered. The lists should be styled and positioned with CSS. The following rules are included by default:

#generated-document-toc {
  flow: document-toc;
  display: -obfl-toc;
  -obfl-toc-range: document;
}

#generated-volume-toc {
  flow: volume-toc;
  display: -obfl-toc;
  -obfl-toc-range: volume;
}

This means that a document range table of contents is added to the named flow called “document-toc”, and a volume range table of contents is added to the named flow called “volume-toc”. In order to consume these named flows use the function flow(). For example, to position the document range table of contents at the beginning of the first volume, and to repeat the volume range table of content at the beginning of every other volume, include the following additional rules:

@volume {
  @begin {
    content: flow(volume-toc, document);
  }
}

@volume:first {
  @begin {
    content: flow(document-toc, document);
  }
}

By default, the table of contents is styled as a normal unordered list, only including the text of the headings. Including the braille page numbers of the headings can be done using the target-counter function. For example, to place the page number after the heading title, with a space in between:

#generated-document-toc li > a,
#generated-volume-toc li > a {
  content: ' ' target-counter(attr(href), page);
}

Note that there is only a single “depth” setting for both lists. If you wish to include less levels of headings in the document TOC, you have to achieve it through CSS styling. For example, to get only one level of headings in the document TOC, make all nested list elements invisible:

#generated-document-toc > li > list {
  display: none;
}

See the CSS specification for more info:

$toc-exclude-class variable

Class name for excluding headings from the table of contents.

If specified, heading elements with this class name are excluded from the generated tables of contents.