A Perl program to generate a Table of Contents (ToC) for HTML documents.
For the latest information on htmltoc, see 
<URL:http://www.oac.uci.edu/indiv/ehood/htmltoc.html>.
htmltoc allows you to specify "significant elements" that will be hyperlinked to in 
a "Table of Contents" (ToC) for a given set of HTML documents.
Basically, the ToC generated is a multi-level level list containing links to the 
significant elements. htmltoc inserts the links into the ToC to significant elements 
at a level specified by the user. 
 If H1s are specified as level 1, than they appear in the first level list of the 
ToC. If H2s are specified as a level 2, than they appear in a second level list 
in the ToC.
See ToC Map File on how to tell htmltoc what are the significant elements and at 
what level they should occur in the ToC.
In standard operation, the created ToC is sent to standard output, or to the file 
specified by the -toc command-line option. For more information on controlling 
the contents of the created ToC, see Formatting the ToC.
htmltoc also supports the ability to incorporate the ToC into the HTML 
document itself via the -inline command-line option. This only works if a single 
HTML file is being processed. See Inlining the ToC for more information.
In order for htmltoc to support linking to significant elements, htmltoc inserts 
anchors into the significant elements. Since this requires modification of the 
original HTML document(s), the originals are backed up with a ".org" suffix 
appended to the filenames.
The following sections give more information on htmltoc:
htmltoc is invoked from a Unix shell, with the following syntax:
% htmltoc [options] file ... > tocfile 
% htmltoc -toc tocfile [options] file ... 
% htmltoc -inline [options] file 
The following options are available:
-entrysep string 
 Use string as the entry separator for same level entries that are specified 
not to use the LI element to list each entry. The default value is ", ". See 
Formatting the ToC for more information.
-footer filename 
Append filename, containing HTML markup, to the end of the ToC. This option is invalid when the -inline option is specified.
-header filename 
Prepend filename, containing HTML markup, to the beginning of the ToC. The desired format of filename is slightly different if the ToC is being inlined, or is an external document. See Formatting the ToC and Inlining the ToC for more information.
-help 
 Short message giving all options available to htmltoc.
-inline 
Insert ToC into the document being processed. This options is only valid if one HTML file is being processed. See Inlining the ToC for more information on this option.
-noorg 
 htmltoc normally backs up the original HTML files with a ".org" 
extension. When this option is specified, htmltoc will remove the backup 
files when done.
-ol 
 Put level 1 ToC entries in an order list (OL).
-prefix string 
 Use string as the prefix for ID values used in NAME/HREF attributes in 
anchors (A) for linking ToC entries to the document(s). The default prefix 
is "xtocid".
-quiet 
 htmltoc normally prints out informative messages on what it is doing. 
This option suppress these messages.
-textonly 
 htmltoc by default, preserves HTML markup that exists in a significant 
element to appear in the ToC. This options tells htmltoc to only use the 
textual content of the ToC element. If this option is not specified, htmltoc 
will still ignore the following tags: A, HR, P, IMG.
-title string 
 Set the title, (i.e. TITLE element) of the generated ToC document to string. 
This option has no affect if the -header or -inline options are specified. 
The default title is "Table of Contents".
-toc file 
 By default, the ToC is sent to standard output (unless the -inline option is 
specified). This option explicitly tells htmltoc to output the ToC to file.
-toclabel string 
 Put string before ToC. This option has no effect if the -header option is 
specified. The default ToC label is "<H1>Table of Contents</H1>".
-tocmap filename 
 Use filename as the ToC map file. By default, htmltoc only indexes H1s 
and H2s. See ToC Map File for more information.
-useorg 
 This option tells htmltoc to use the ".org" backup files already existing. 
In normal operation, htmltoc copies the files to be processed to the same 
filenames with ".org" suffixes. Then, htmltoc reads the ".org" files to 
find significant elements, and writes the new (modified) files to the 
filenames without the ".org" suffix. This operation gives the appearance 
that the files were editted in-place.
 In other words, the -useorg option tells htmltoc not to perform the 
initial copying of the files to ".org" files. However, if a ".org" file does not 
exist for a given file, htmltoc will perform the initial copy operation.
Any arguments that are not part of the command-line options are treated as HTML files to be processed.
When htmltoc is running, htmltoc will normally output some informative 
messages on what htmltoc is doing, or done. These messages can be suppressed 
via the -quiet option.
The ToC map file allows you to tell htmltoc what significant elements to include in 
the ToC, what level they should appear in the ToC, and any text to include before 
and/or after the ToC entry. The format of the map file is as follows:
significant_element:level:sig_element_end:before_text,after_text significant_element:level:sig_element_end:before_text,after_text ...
Each line of the map file contains a series of fields separated by the `:' character. 
The definition of each field is as follows:
 The tag name of the significant element. Example values are H1, H2, H5. 
This field is case-insensitive.
 What level the significant element occupies in the ToC. This valid must be 
numeric, and non-zero. If the value is negative, consective entries 
represented by the significant_element will be separated by the value set by 
-entrysep option.
The tag name that signifies the termination of the significant_element.
 Example: The DT tag is a marker in HTML and not a container. However, 
one can index DT sections of a definition list by using the value DD in the 
sig_element_end field (this does assume that each DT has a DD following it).
 If the sig_element_end is empty, then the corresponding end tag of the 
specified significant_element is used. Example: If H1 is the 
significant_element, than htmltoc looks for a "</H1>" for terminating the 
significant_element. 
 Caution: the sig_element_end value should not contain the `<` and `>' tag 
delimiters. If you want the sig_element_end to be the end tag of another 
element than that of the significant_element, than use "/element_name".
The sig_element_end field is case-insensitive.
 This is literal text that will be inserted before and/or after the ToC entry 
for the given significant_element. The before_text is separated from the 
after_text by the `,' character (which implies a comma cannot be contained 
in the before/after text). See examples following for the use of this field.
In the map file, the first two fields MUST be specified.
Following are a few examples to help illustrate how a ToC map file works.
The following map file reflects the default mapping htmltoc uses if no map file is 
explicitly specified:
# Default mapping for htmltoc # Comments can be inserted in the map file via the '#' character H1:1 # H1 are level 1 ToC entries H2:2 # H2 are level 2 ToC entries
The following map file makes use of the before/after text fields:
# A ToC map file that adds some formatting H1:1::<STRONG>,</STRONG> # Make level 1 ToC entries <STRONG> H2:2::<EM>,</EM> # Make level 2 entries <EM> H2:3 # Make level 3 entries as is
The following map file tries to index definition terms:
# A ToC map file that can work for Glossary type documents
H1:1
H2:2
DT:3:DD:<EM>,</EM>    # Assumes document has a DD for each DT, otherwise ToC
                      # will get entries with alot of text.
The following map file demonstrates how one can bastardize the use HTML elements:
# A ToC map file that wraps ToC entries in header tags. This is illegal # HTML, but it looks pretty good in Mosaic. H1:1::<H3>,</H3> H2:2::<H4>,</H4> H3:3::<H5>,</H5>
The ToC Map File gives you control on how the ToC entries may look, but 
htmltoc has other options to affect the final appearance of the ToC file created.
With the -header option, htmltoc will prepend the contents of the file before the 
generated ToC. This allows you to have introductory text, or any other text, before 
the ToC.
 If you use the -header option, make sure the file specified contains the 
opening HTML tag, the HEAD element (containing the TITLE element), and 
the opening BODY tag. However, these tags/elements should not be in the 
header file if the -inline options is used. See Inlining the ToC for 
information on what the header file should contain for inlining the ToC.
With the -footer option, htmltoc will append the contents of the file after the 
generated ToC.
 If you use the -footer, make sure it includes the closing BODY and HTML 
tags.
htmltoc will add the appropriate HTML markup to if either the -header or 
-footer option is not specified to insure a valid HTML document is created for 
the ToC.
If you do not want/need to deal with header, and footer, files, then htmltoc 
allows you specify the title, -title option, of the ToC file; and it allows you to 
specify a heading, or label, to put before ToC entries' list, the -toclabel option. 
Both options have default values, see Usage for more information on each option.
htmltoc supports the ability to incorporating the ToC directly into an HTML 
document via the -inline option. Inlining can only occur if one, and ONLY one, 
HTML file is being processed, AND the HTML file contains an opening BODY tag.
The ToC generated is inserted right after the opening BODY tag, and before any 
other HTML markup in the file. If the -header option is specified, then the 
contents of the specified file are inserted after the BODY tag, but before the ToC. 
Otherwise, htmltoc inserts the text specified by the -toclabel option.
 The header file should not containing the beginning HTML tag and HEAD 
element since the HTML file being processed should already contains 
these tags/elements.
For the average user, the only thing to worry about is the -title and 
-toclabel options. Everything else is provided for customizing the 
behavior of htmltoc.
htmltoc is smart enough to detect anchors inside significant elements. If 
the anchor defines the NAME attribute, htmltoc uses the value. Else, it 
adds its own NAME attribute to the anchor.
htmltoc will not process files related to command-line options if they are 
also specified to be processed for ToC significant elements. Example: The 
command, "htmltoc -header header.html -toc toc.html 
*.html" will cause header.html and toc.html to be included in the 
HTML files to processed due to shell filename globbing of "*.html". 
htmltoc is smart of enough to detect this, and exempt header.html 
and toc.html from being processed for ToC significant elements.
The TITLE element is treated specially if specified in the ToC map file. It 
is illegal to insert anchors (A) into TITLE elements. Therefore, htmltoc 
will actually link to the filename itself instead of the TITLE element of the 
document.
htmltoc will ignore significant elements if it does not contain any 
non-whitespace characters. A warning message is generated if such a 
condition exists.
htmltoc is not very efficient (memory and speed), and can be extremely 
slow for large documents.
Invalid markup will be generated if a significant element is contained inside of an anchor. For example:
 <A NAME="foo"><H1>The FOO command</H1></A>
 will be converted to (if H1 is a significant element),
 <A NAME="foo"><H1><A NAME="xtocidXXXXX">The</A> FOO 
command</H1></A> 
which is illegal since anchors cannot be nested.
It is better style to put anchor statements within the element to be anchored. For example, the following is preferred:
 <H1><A NAME="foo">The FOO command</A></H1> 
 htmltoc will detect the "foo" NAME and use it.
NAME attributes without quotes are not recognized.
htmltoc will possibly not work correctly if the characters < and > are not 
solely used to delimit HTML elements.
Hopefully, they have been fixed.