Antenna House Formatter

Antenna House Formatter (AH Formatter) is a proprietary software program that uses either XSL-FO[4][5][6] or Cascading Style Sheets (CSS)[7][8][9] to convert XML and HTML documents into PDF, SVG, INX, MIF, XPS, text, and Microsoft Word formats[10]

Antenna House Formatter
Original author(s)Antenna House Co., Ltd[1]
Developer(s)Antenna House
Initial release22 November 2000 (2000-11-22).[2]
Stable release
V7.0 R1 / February 24, 2020 (2020-02-24)[3]
Written inC++
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows, Mac OS X, Linux
Typeconverter
LicenseProprietary
Websiteantennahouse.com

AH Formatter is developed by Antenna House Co., Ltd[1], based in Tokyo, Japan. International sales and support is provided by Antenna House, Inc.[11], based in Newark, DE, USA.

History

The first English-language release of "Antenna House XSL Formatter" was announced on the XSL-List mailing list on 22 November 2000.[2]

Antenna House XSL Formatter V1.2 Alpha was one of six XSL Formatters that provided the test results[12] for the test suite for the XSL 1.0 Candidate Recommendation that was required for XSL 1.0 to proceed to the Proposed Recommendation stage.

In December 2008, Antenna House Co., Ltd announced[13] the availability of Antenna House Formatter V5.0 with support for both XSL-FO and CSS. The product supporting both XSL-FO and CSS was released as "AH Formatter", and single stylesheet language versions were released as "AH XSL Formatter" and "AH CSS Formatter".

Uses

Antenna House Formatter is used, for example, to generate PDF from JATS[14][15][16], DITA[17][18] or DocBook[19] XML.

AH CSS Formatter is used in the "md2pdf"[20][21] GitHub project for Markdown to PDF conversion.

References

  1. "PDF、組版と文書変換のアンテナハウス株式会社". アンテナハウス株式会社.
  2. "A new XSL Formatter". www.biglist.com.
  3. "Formatter V7.0 R1". 24 February 2020.
  4. "XSL-FO Processors - Print and Page Layout Community Group". www.w3.org.
  5. "XML Print and Page Layout Working Group". www.w3.org.
  6. "data2type GmbH: XSL-FO - Formatter comparison". www.data2type.de.
  7. McKesson, Nellie. "Building Books with CSS3". alistapart.com.
  8. "Converters, tools and services — print-css.rocks 1.5.1 documentation - CSS Paged Media Tutorial and Showcase - Andreas Jung, ZOPYX". www.print-css.rocks. Archived from the original on 2018-01-21. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
  9. Kleinfeld, Sanders (6 August 2013). "The Case for Authoring and Producing Books in (X)HTML5". Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. "Antenna House XSL-FO/CSS Formatter - XML to PDF/Print - Ideal for DITA, S1000D & HTML".
  11. "Format. Standardize. Automate". Antenna House.
  12. "XSL CR Test Suite -- Test Coverage". www.w3.org.
  13. "News Release [Antenna House Formatter V5.0] CSS and XSL-FO". www.antenna.co.jp.
  14. Katoh, Keishi; Kobayashi, Tokushige; Kitazawa, Mitsuru (11 May 2018). "Reducing costs and expanding XML submissions with PDF to JATS conversion". National Center for Biotechnology Information (US) via www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.
  15. Nakanishi, Hidehiko; Naganawa, Toshiyuki; Tokizane, Soichi; Yamamoto, Tsuyoshi (11 May 2018). "Creating JATS XML from Japanese language articles and automatic typesetting using XSLT". National Center for Biotechnology Information (US) via www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.
  16. Tokizane, Soichi (11 May 2018). "Implementing XML for Japanese-language scholarly articles". National Center for Biotechnology Information (US) via www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.
  17. "DITA Open Toolkit". www.dita-ot.org.
  18. "DITA-related Software Tools". 11 February 2014.
  19. "XSL-FO processors". www.sagehill.net.
  20. "Convert Markdown documents to PDF". github.com.
  21. "Markdown to PDF Conversion Using AH Formatter" (PDF). github.com.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.