The GELLMU Examples Archive<abbr >GELLMU</abbr > and <abbr >CSS</abbr >with a Gratuitous ASCII Chart in a FootnoteWilliam F. Hammond30 April 2002At this point the author is evaluating the usefulness for the GELLMU Project of using Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) to provide crude renderings of the XML version of the projects article document typeOne point involves the placement of verbatim text, such as an ASCIIASCIICHART0123456789ABCDEF01230123456789;4ABCDEFGHIJKLMNO5PQRSTUVWXYZ6abcdefghijklmno7pqrstuvwxyz chart in a footnoteVarious versions of this document are available: href="ftascii.glm"GELLMU sourcehref="ftascii.xml"Spawned XMLhref="ftascii.html"HTML formatted from the XML versionhref="ftascii.ltx" source formatted from the XML versionhref="ftascii.dvi"DVIhref="ftascii.pdf"Lettersize PDF for printingNote that the XML version is an instance of the GELLMU article document type, which means that from the viewpoint of a web browser its vocabulary is completely unknown It contains a link to a CSS style sheet that serves to provide a crude screen formattingNote that CSS is presently rather limited In particular, it does not provide a way to move a footnote to the bottom, or, for that matter, to move anythingNote that there are no live anchors in the web rendering of the XML version if only because CSS provides no way to do thatthe projects article document type presently does not use XMLlevel anchorsThe CSS renditon of the XML version works as intended when viewed with Opera 6 on a Win32 platform The author is not fully satisfied with the CSS handling of any other web browser that he has tried to useThe screen PDF formatter for GELLMU has not yet been completed Screen PDF will have live anchors and in many respects be similar to the experimental PP4PDF formatter for PDF incremental slides An example slideshow is available at http://math.albany.edu:8000/math/pers/hammond/Presen/tug2001/ , and an anchor for the draft formatter will be found at the end of the slide show