<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1" standalone="no" ?> 
<!DOCTYPE document SYSTEM "../dynamic_rml.dtd"> 
<!--  To save b loating up the test case, I have used the dynamic_rml DTD and a simple
loop to spit out paragraphs-->
<document filename="test_026_leftright.pdf"> 


<template pageSize="(595, 842)" leftMargin="72" showBoundary="0">
	<pageTemplate id="cover">
		<pageGraphics>
			<setFont name="Helvetica-BoldOblique" size="18"/>
			<drawRightString x="523" y="800">RML2PDF Test Suite - Test #026 Left/Right pages</drawRightString>
		</pageGraphics>
		<frame id="F1" x1="10%" y1="10%" width="80%" height="80%"/>
	</pageTemplate>
	<pageTemplate id="plain">
		<pageGraphics>
			<setFont name="Helvetica-Bold" size="14"/>
			<drawRightString x="523" y="800">A plain(ish) page template with everything centered</drawRightString>
		</pageGraphics>
		<frame id="F1" x1="10%" y1="10%" width="80%" height="80%"/>
	</pageTemplate>
	
	<pageTemplate id="left">
		<pageGraphics>
			<setFont name="Helvetica-Bold" size="14"/>
			<drawCenteredString x="297" y="800">A page template for the left side of a book</drawCenteredString>
			<fill color="gray"/>
			<rect x="20" y="50" width="20" height="742" fill="1"/>
			<circle x="550" y="300" radius="10" fill="1"/>
			<circle x="550" y="542" radius="10" fill="1"/>
		</pageGraphics>
		<frame id="F1" x1="10%" y1="10%" width="70%" height="80%"/>
	</pageTemplate>

	<pageTemplate id="right">
		<pageGraphics>
			<setFont name="Helvetica-Bold" size="14"/>
			<drawCenteredString x="297" y="800">A page template for the right side of a book</drawCenteredString>
			<fill color="gray"/>
			<rect x="555" y="50" width="20" height="742" fill="1"/>
			<circle x="45" y="300" radius="10" fill="1"/>
			<circle x="45" y="542" radius="10" fill="1"/>
		</pageGraphics>
		<frame id="F1" x1="20%" y1="10%" width="70%" height="80%"/>
	</pageTemplate>


</template>

<stylesheet>
	<initialize>
		<alias id="bt" value="style.BodyText"/>
	</initialize>
	<paraStyle
		name="h1nopb"
		parent="style.Normal"
		fontName="Times-Bold"
		fontSize="18"
		leading="22"
		spaceAfter="6"
		keepWithNext="1"
		/>
	<paraStyle
		name="h1"
		parent="h1nopb"
		pageBreakBefore="yes"
		/>
</stylesheet>


<story>
		<para style="h1nopb">Demonstration of left and right alternating pages.</para>

		<para style="bt">
			We start off using our standard cover page template.
			We then put a templae into the story which alternates left and right. The templates
			have mock staple-holes and other furniture so you can see which is which.
		</para>
		<para style="bt">
		For this exercise we defined four page templates - cover, left, right and plain - and
		use a tag like this in a nextTemplate instruction to set up the cycle:
		</para>
		<xpre>
&lt;setNextTemplate name="left,right"/&gt;</xpre>
		
		<setNextTemplate name="left,right"/>

		<para style="h1">This should be on a left-side page, with alternating templates until countermanded.</para>
		<loop_b var="i" in="range(20)">
		<para style="bt">
			To characterize a linguistic level L,
			this selectionally introduced contextual
			feature delimits the requirement that
			branching is not tolerated within the
			dominance scope of a complex
			symbol. Notice, incidentally, that the
			notion of level of grammaticalness
			does not affect the structure of the
			levels of acceptability from fairly high
			(e.g. (99a)) to virtual gibberish (e.g.
			(98d)). Suppose, for instance, that a
			subset of English sentences interesting
			on quite independent grounds appears
			to correlate rather closely with an
			important distinction in language use.
			Presumably, this analysis of a
			formative as a pair of sets of features is
			not quite equivalent to the system of
			base rules exclusive of the lexicon. We
			have already seen that the appearance
			of parasitic gaps in domains relatively
			inaccessible to ordinary extraction
			does not readily tolerate the strong
			generative capacity of the theory.
		</para>
		<spacer length="36"/>
		</loop_b>

		<setNextTemplate name="plain"/>
		<para style="h1">This should back on a plain page. More Chomsky...</para>
		<para style="bt">
Note that the descriptive power of the base component is not subject to
the levels of acceptability from fairly high (e.g. (99a)) to virtual
gibberish (e.g. (98d)).  However, this assumption is not correct, since
most of the methodological work in modern linguistics is, apparently,
determined by an abstract underlying order.  Nevertheless, a subset of
English sentences interesting on quite independent grounds does not
affect the structure of a stipulation to place the constructions into
these various categories.  Note that most of the methodological work in
modern linguistics raises serious doubts about a parasitic gap
construction.  To characterize a linguistic level L, the systematic use
of complex symbols is to be regarded as an abstract underlying order.
		</para>

		<para style="bt">
		Use a tag like this in a nextTemplate instruction to set up the cycle left,right,right,.....:
		</para>
		<xpre>
&lt;setNextTemplate name="left,*,right"/&gt;</xpre>
		<setNextTemplate name="left,*,right"/>
		<para style="h1">This should be on a left-side page, followed by right until countermanded.</para>
		<loop_b var="i" in="range(20)">
		<para style="bt">
I suggested that these results would follow from the assumption that the
appearance of parasitic gaps in domains relatively inaccessible to
ordinary extraction is to be regarded as a parasitic gap construction.
In the discussion of resumptive pronouns following (81), a subset of
English sentences interesting on quite independent grounds may remedy
and, at the same time, eliminate the traditional practice of
grammarians.  If the position of the trace in (99c) were only relatively
inaccessible to movement, a descriptively adequate grammar does not
affect the structure of the ultimate standard that determines the
accuracy of any proposed grammar.  Suppose, for instance, that any
associated supporting element is, apparently, determined by the strong
generative capacity of the theory.  On our assumptions, most of the
methodological work in modern linguistics is unspecified with respect to
a stipulation to place the constructions into these various categories.
		</para>
		<spacer length="36"/>
		</loop_b>

		<setNextTemplate name="plain"/>
		<para style="h1">This should back on a plain page. More Chomsky...</para>
		<para style="bt">
We have already seen that most of the methodological work in modern
linguistics suffices to account for the extended c-command discussed in
connection with (34).  It must be emphasized, once again, that the
speaker-hearer's linguistic intuition is not to be considered in
determining an abstract underlying order.  Thus any associated
supporting element is to be regarded as a general convention regarding
the forms of the grammar.  However, this assumption is not correct,
since the theory of syntactic features developed earlier is unspecified
with respect to nondistinctness in the sense of distinctive feature
theory.  Furthermore, the natural general principle that will subsume
this case is, apparently, determined by the ultimate standard that
determines the accuracy of any proposed grammar.
		</para>

</story>

</document>
