It would be useful to know where actual page breaks were created by original XHTML line number.
Uses:
1. End-users usually refer to errors on page x in a PDF and it would be handy to locate at least the line number of the offending source markup
2. It would be nice to feed the eventual page break information back to the markup (and to the end user) so that users can make informed decisions about whether to force a page break or remove extra space etc. in the original markup.
I could envision a quick Prince function that didn't actually generate a PDF but rather inserted <forcedpagebreak> and <nonforcedpagebreak> tokens in the original markup (or an output file).
-John
Uses:
1. End-users usually refer to errors on page x in a PDF and it would be handy to locate at least the line number of the offending source markup
2. It would be nice to feed the eventual page break information back to the markup (and to the end user) so that users can make informed decisions about whether to force a page break or remove extra space etc. in the original markup.
I could envision a quick Prince function that didn't actually generate a PDF but rather inserted <forcedpagebreak> and <nonforcedpagebreak> tokens in the original markup (or an output file).
-John
John Clarke
Cornerstone Systems Northwest Inc.