@@ -294,7 +294,7 @@ This video has been encoded at 4 different speeds: `0.75x`, `1x`, `1.25x`, and `
More on `url_name`
==================
Every content element (within a course) should have a unique id. This id is formed as `{category}/{url_name}`, or automatically generated from the content if `url_name` is not specified. Categories are the different tag types ('chapter', 'problem', 'html', 'sequential', etc). Url_name is a string containing a-z, A-Z, dot (.), underscore (_), and ':'. This is what appears in urls that point to this object.
Every content element (within a course) should have a unique id. This id is formed as `{category}/{url_name}`, or automatically generated from the content if `url_name` is not specified. Categories are the different tag types ('chapter', 'problem', 'html', 'sequential', etc). Url_name is a string containing a-z, A-Z, 0-9, dot (.), underscore (_), and ':'. This is what appears in urls that point to this object.
Colon (':') is special--when looking for the content definition in an xml, ':' will be replaced with '/'. This allows organizing content into folders. For example, given the pointer tag
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@@ -567,7 +567,77 @@ If you want to customize the courseware tabs displayed for your course, specify
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Textbooks
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Support is currently provided for HTML-based and PDF-based textbooks. In addition to enabling the display of textbooks in tabs (see above), specific information about the location of textbook content must be configured.
Support is currently provided for image-based, HTML-based and PDF-based textbooks. In addition to enabling the display of textbooks in tabs (see above), specific information about the location of textbook content must be configured.
Image-based Textbooks
=====================
Configuration
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Image-based textbooks are configured at the course level in the XML markup. Here is an example:
Each `textbook` element is displayed on a different tab. The `title` attribute is used as the tab's name, and the `book_url` attribute points to the remote directory that contains the images of the text. Note the trailing slash on the end of the `book_url` attribute.
The images must be stored in the same directory as the `book_url`, with filenames matching `pXXX.png`, where `XXX` is a three-digit number representing the page number (with leading zeroes as necessary). Pages start at `p001.png`.
Each textbook must also have its own table of contents. This is read from the `book_url` location, by appending `toc.xml`. This file contains a `table_of_contents` parent element, with `entry` elements nested below it. Each `entry` has attributes for `name`, `page_label`, and `page`, as well as an optional `chapter` attribute. An arbitrary number of levels of nesting of `entry` elements within other `entry` elements is supported, but you're likely to only want two levels. The `page` represents the actual page to link to, while the `page_label` matches the displayed page number on that page. Here's an example:
It is possible to add links to specific pages in a textbook by using a URL that encodes the index of the textbook and the page number. The URL is of the form `/course/book/${bookindex}/$page}`. If the page is omitted from the URL, the first page is assumed.
You can use a `customtag` to create a template for such links. For example, you can create a `book` template in the `customtag` directory, containing:
.. code-block:: xml
<imgsrc="/static/images/icons/textbook_icon.png"/> More information given in <ahref="/course/book/${book}/${page}">the text</a>.
The course content can then link to page 25 using the `customtag` element:
Conditionals don't actually store any state, so this value is always an empty JSON dictionary (`'{}'`). We should probably remove these entries altogether.