On 7 Feb 2024, at 03:47, Joel via ntg-context
wrote: I have an extensive multi-book project. Each book has a nickname, like TB for "Textbook", "WB 1" for the "Workbook, Vol. 1":
TB -- 01_textbook.tex WB 1 -- 03_workbook.tex WB 2 -- 04_workbook.tex WB 3 -- 05_workbook.tex WB 4 -- 06_workbook.tex TG -- 08_teachersguide.tex
I have to prove to a government agency that the content meets several requirements, so I'm giving them a simple file that says something like "Requirement A is met in TB, "Cats", p. 11" basically letting the reader know its in the textbook, section called "Cats", on p. 11. To mark the pages, I'm simply dropping in macros called "\requirementA" "\requirementB" on whichever page of whichever book demonstrates it meets the requirement, then the file will aquatically list the book, section, and page number by searching for that macro.
[snip]
Here is a sample message what the output should give:
"Requirement A is met in WB 3, "Bears", p. 33."
Taking you literally in that you want a *file* listing the occurences and not a typeset page listing the occurrences then you could try using the following in your document at the places where you currently put \requirementA etc: \writestatus{RequirementMet}{Requirement A is met in section \fetchmark[section][current], p. \pagenumber} This will write the current section title and page number to the console listing, prefixed by the word "RequirementMet". To produce the file for your customer all you have to do is filter these lines out of the .log file that is produced when you compile your book. In Unix-like systems that is a simple: grep RequirementMet file.log Regards, — Bruce Horrocks Hampshire, UK