X-Git-Url: http://git.indexdata.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Fexamples.xml;h=a2c2ab35d8d296d7224399488230bc3ea0166fae;hb=5ca4e60e990af6ad6b62ebff855d7b642f37c3ec;hp=d37463fff4326f2f00a9210f457e49ed4d75d225;hpb=e6ff84c71e457ff668dce640382fc1ad88c37d6d;p=idzebra-moved-to-github.git diff --git a/doc/examples.xml b/doc/examples.xml index d37463f..a2c2ab3 100644 --- a/doc/examples.xml +++ b/doc/examples.xml @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ - + Example Configurations @@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ option to specify an alternative master configuration file. - The master configuration file tells Zebra: + The master configuration file tells &zebra;: @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ Example 1: XML Indexing And Searching - This example shows how Zebra can be used with absolutely minimal + This example shows how &zebra; can be used with absolutely minimal configuration to index a body of XML documents, and search them using @@ -88,9 +88,9 @@ would you? :-) - Now we need to create a Zebra database to hold and index the XML + Now we need to create a &zebra; database to hold and index the XML records. We do this with the - Zebra indexer, zebraidx, which is + &zebra; indexer, zebraidx, which is driven by the zebra.cfg configuration file. For our purposes, we don't need any special behaviour - we can use the defaults - so we can start with a @@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ - That's all you need for a minimal Zebra configuration. Now you can + That's all you need for a minimal &zebra; configuration. Now you can roll the XML records into the database and build the indexes: zebraidx update records @@ -228,7 +228,7 @@ <Zthes> element. - This is a two-step process. First, we need to tell Zebra that we + This is a two-step process. First, we need to tell &zebra; that we want to support the BIB-1 attribute set. Then we need to tell it which elements of its record pertain to access point 4. @@ -271,7 +271,7 @@ xelm /Zthes/termModifiedBy termModifiedBy:w Declare Bib-1 attribute set. See bib1.att in - Zebra's tab directory. + &zebra;'s tab directory. @@ -375,7 +375,7 @@ rendering engine can handle. I generated the EPS version of the image by exporting a line-drawing done in TGIF, then converted that to the GIF using a shell-script called "epstogif" which used an appallingly baroque sequence of conversions, which I would prefer not to pollute -the Zebra build environment with: +the &zebra; build environment with: #!/bin/sh