Index: gcc/gmp/doc/texinfo.tex |
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-% texinfo.tex -- TeX macros to handle Texinfo files. |
-% |
-% Load plain if necessary, i.e., if running under initex. |
-\expandafter\ifx\csname fmtname\endcsname\relax\input plain\fi |
-% |
-\def\texinfoversion{2008-04-18.10} |
-% |
-% Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, |
-% 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, |
-% 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
-% |
-% This texinfo.tex file is free software: you can redistribute it and/or |
-% modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as |
-% published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the |
-% License, or (at your option) any later version. |
-% |
-% This texinfo.tex file is distributed in the hope that it will be |
-% useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty |
-% of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU |
-% General Public License for more details. |
-% |
-% You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
-% along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. |
-% |
-% As a special exception, when this file is read by TeX when processing |
-% a Texinfo source document, you may use the result without |
-% restriction. (This has been our intent since Texinfo was invented.) |
-% |
-% Please try the latest version of texinfo.tex before submitting bug |
-% reports; you can get the latest version from: |
-% http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/ (the Texinfo home page), or |
-% ftp://tug.org/tex/texinfo.tex |
-% (and all CTAN mirrors, see http://www.ctan.org). |
-% The texinfo.tex in any given distribution could well be out |
-% of date, so if that's what you're using, please check. |
-% |
-% Send bug reports to bug-texinfo@gnu.org. Please include including a |
-% complete document in each bug report with which we can reproduce the |
-% problem. Patches are, of course, greatly appreciated. |
-% |
-% To process a Texinfo manual with TeX, it's most reliable to use the |
-% texi2dvi shell script that comes with the distribution. For a simple |
-% manual foo.texi, however, you can get away with this: |
-% tex foo.texi |
-% texindex foo.?? |
-% tex foo.texi |
-% tex foo.texi |
-% dvips foo.dvi -o # or whatever; this makes foo.ps. |
-% The extra TeX runs get the cross-reference information correct. |
-% Sometimes one run after texindex suffices, and sometimes you need more |
-% than two; texi2dvi does it as many times as necessary. |
-% |
-% It is possible to adapt texinfo.tex for other languages, to some |
-% extent. You can get the existing language-specific files from the |
-% full Texinfo distribution. |
-% |
-% The GNU Texinfo home page is http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo. |
- |
- |
-\message{Loading texinfo [version \texinfoversion]:} |
- |
-% If in a .fmt file, print the version number |
-% and turn on active characters that we couldn't do earlier because |
-% they might have appeared in the input file name. |
-\everyjob{\message{[Texinfo version \texinfoversion]}% |
- \catcode`+=\active \catcode`\_=\active} |
- |
- |
-\chardef\other=12 |
- |
-% We never want plain's \outer definition of \+ in Texinfo. |
-% For @tex, we can use \tabalign. |
-\let\+ = \relax |
- |
-% Save some plain tex macros whose names we will redefine. |
-\let\ptexb=\b |
-\let\ptexbullet=\bullet |
-\let\ptexc=\c |
-\let\ptexcomma=\, |
-\let\ptexdot=\. |
-\let\ptexdots=\dots |
-\let\ptexend=\end |
-\let\ptexequiv=\equiv |
-\let\ptexexclam=\! |
-\let\ptexfootnote=\footnote |
-\let\ptexgtr=> |
-\let\ptexhat=^ |
-\let\ptexi=\i |
-\let\ptexindent=\indent |
-\let\ptexinsert=\insert |
-\let\ptexlbrace=\{ |
-\let\ptexless=< |
-\let\ptexnewwrite\newwrite |
-\let\ptexnoindent=\noindent |
-\let\ptexplus=+ |
-\let\ptexrbrace=\} |
-\let\ptexslash=\/ |
-\let\ptexstar=\* |
-\let\ptext=\t |
-\let\ptextop=\top |
- |
-% If this character appears in an error message or help string, it |
-% starts a new line in the output. |
-\newlinechar = `^^J |
- |
-% Use TeX 3.0's \inputlineno to get the line number, for better error |
-% messages, but if we're using an old version of TeX, don't do anything. |
-% |
-\ifx\inputlineno\thisisundefined |
- \let\linenumber = \empty % Pre-3.0. |
-\else |
- \def\linenumber{l.\the\inputlineno:\space} |
-\fi |
- |
-% Set up fixed words for English if not already set. |
-\ifx\putwordAppendix\undefined \gdef\putwordAppendix{Appendix}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordChapter\undefined \gdef\putwordChapter{Chapter}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordfile\undefined \gdef\putwordfile{file}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordin\undefined \gdef\putwordin{in}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordIndexIsEmpty\undefined \gdef\putwordIndexIsEmpty{(Index is empty)}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordIndexNonexistent\undefined \gdef\putwordIndexNonexistent{(Index is nonexistent)}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordInfo\undefined \gdef\putwordInfo{Info}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordInstanceVariableof\undefined \gdef\putwordInstanceVariableof{Instance Variable of}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMethodon\undefined \gdef\putwordMethodon{Method on}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordNoTitle\undefined \gdef\putwordNoTitle{No Title}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordof\undefined \gdef\putwordof{of}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordon\undefined \gdef\putwordon{on}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordpage\undefined \gdef\putwordpage{page}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordsection\undefined \gdef\putwordsection{section}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordSection\undefined \gdef\putwordSection{Section}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordsee\undefined \gdef\putwordsee{see}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordSee\undefined \gdef\putwordSee{See}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordShortTOC\undefined \gdef\putwordShortTOC{Short Contents}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordTOC\undefined \gdef\putwordTOC{Table of Contents}\fi |
-% |
-\ifx\putwordMJan\undefined \gdef\putwordMJan{January}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMFeb\undefined \gdef\putwordMFeb{February}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMMar\undefined \gdef\putwordMMar{March}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMApr\undefined \gdef\putwordMApr{April}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMMay\undefined \gdef\putwordMMay{May}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMJun\undefined \gdef\putwordMJun{June}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMJul\undefined \gdef\putwordMJul{July}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMAug\undefined \gdef\putwordMAug{August}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMSep\undefined \gdef\putwordMSep{September}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMOct\undefined \gdef\putwordMOct{October}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMNov\undefined \gdef\putwordMNov{November}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordMDec\undefined \gdef\putwordMDec{December}\fi |
-% |
-\ifx\putwordDefmac\undefined \gdef\putwordDefmac{Macro}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordDefspec\undefined \gdef\putwordDefspec{Special Form}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordDefvar\undefined \gdef\putwordDefvar{Variable}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordDefopt\undefined \gdef\putwordDefopt{User Option}\fi |
-\ifx\putwordDeffunc\undefined \gdef\putwordDeffunc{Function}\fi |
- |
-% Since the category of space is not known, we have to be careful. |
-\chardef\spacecat = 10 |
-\def\spaceisspace{\catcode`\ =\spacecat} |
- |
-% sometimes characters are active, so we need control sequences. |
-\chardef\colonChar = `\: |
-\chardef\commaChar = `\, |
-\chardef\dashChar = `\- |
-\chardef\dotChar = `\. |
-\chardef\exclamChar= `\! |
-\chardef\lquoteChar= `\` |
-\chardef\questChar = `\? |
-\chardef\rquoteChar= `\' |
-\chardef\semiChar = `\; |
-\chardef\underChar = `\_ |
- |
-% Ignore a token. |
-% |
-\def\gobble#1{} |
- |
-% The following is used inside several \edef's. |
-\def\makecsname#1{\expandafter\noexpand\csname#1\endcsname} |
- |
-% Hyphenation fixes. |
-\hyphenation{ |
- Flor-i-da Ghost-script Ghost-view Mac-OS Post-Script |
- ap-pen-dix bit-map bit-maps |
- data-base data-bases eshell fall-ing half-way long-est man-u-script |
- man-u-scripts mini-buf-fer mini-buf-fers over-view par-a-digm |
- par-a-digms rath-er rec-tan-gu-lar ro-bot-ics se-vere-ly set-up spa-ces |
- spell-ing spell-ings |
- stand-alone strong-est time-stamp time-stamps which-ever white-space |
- wide-spread wrap-around |
-} |
- |
-% Margin to add to right of even pages, to left of odd pages. |
-\newdimen\bindingoffset |
-\newdimen\normaloffset |
-\newdimen\pagewidth \newdimen\pageheight |
- |
-% For a final copy, take out the rectangles |
-% that mark overfull boxes (in case you have decided |
-% that the text looks ok even though it passes the margin). |
-% |
-\def\finalout{\overfullrule=0pt} |
- |
-% @| inserts a changebar to the left of the current line. It should |
-% surround any changed text. This approach does *not* work if the |
-% change spans more than two lines of output. To handle that, we would |
-% have adopt a much more difficult approach (putting marks into the main |
-% vertical list for the beginning and end of each change). |
-% |
-\def\|{% |
- % \vadjust can only be used in horizontal mode. |
- \leavevmode |
- % |
- % Append this vertical mode material after the current line in the output. |
- \vadjust{% |
- % We want to insert a rule with the height and depth of the current |
- % leading; that is exactly what \strutbox is supposed to record. |
- \vskip-\baselineskip |
- % |
- % \vadjust-items are inserted at the left edge of the type. So |
- % the \llap here moves out into the left-hand margin. |
- \llap{% |
- % |
- % For a thicker or thinner bar, change the `1pt'. |
- \vrule height\baselineskip width1pt |
- % |
- % This is the space between the bar and the text. |
- \hskip 12pt |
- }% |
- }% |
-} |
- |
-% Sometimes it is convenient to have everything in the transcript file |
-% and nothing on the terminal. We don't just call \tracingall here, |
-% since that produces some useless output on the terminal. We also make |
-% some effort to order the tracing commands to reduce output in the log |
-% file; cf. trace.sty in LaTeX. |
-% |
-\def\gloggingall{\begingroup \globaldefs = 1 \loggingall \endgroup}% |
-\def\loggingall{% |
- \tracingstats2 |
- \tracingpages1 |
- \tracinglostchars2 % 2 gives us more in etex |
- \tracingparagraphs1 |
- \tracingoutput1 |
- \tracingmacros2 |
- \tracingrestores1 |
- \showboxbreadth\maxdimen \showboxdepth\maxdimen |
- \ifx\eTeXversion\undefined\else % etex gives us more logging |
- \tracingscantokens1 |
- \tracingifs1 |
- \tracinggroups1 |
- \tracingnesting2 |
- \tracingassigns1 |
- \fi |
- \tracingcommands3 % 3 gives us more in etex |
- \errorcontextlines16 |
-}% |
- |
-% add check for \lastpenalty to plain's definitions. If the last thing |
-% we did was a \nobreak, we don't want to insert more space. |
-% |
-\def\smallbreak{\ifnum\lastpenalty<10000\par\ifdim\lastskip<\smallskipamount |
- \removelastskip\penalty-50\smallskip\fi\fi} |
-\def\medbreak{\ifnum\lastpenalty<10000\par\ifdim\lastskip<\medskipamount |
- \removelastskip\penalty-100\medskip\fi\fi} |
-\def\bigbreak{\ifnum\lastpenalty<10000\par\ifdim\lastskip<\bigskipamount |
- \removelastskip\penalty-200\bigskip\fi\fi} |
- |
-% For @cropmarks command. |
-% Do @cropmarks to get crop marks. |
-% |
-\newif\ifcropmarks |
-\let\cropmarks = \cropmarkstrue |
-% |
-% Dimensions to add cropmarks at corners. |
-% Added by P. A. MacKay, 12 Nov. 1986 |
-% |
-\newdimen\outerhsize \newdimen\outervsize % set by the paper size routines |
-\newdimen\cornerlong \cornerlong=1pc |
-\newdimen\cornerthick \cornerthick=.3pt |
-\newdimen\topandbottommargin \topandbottommargin=.75in |
- |
-% Output a mark which sets \thischapter, \thissection and \thiscolor. |
-% We dump everything together because we only have one kind of mark. |
-% This works because we only use \botmark / \topmark, not \firstmark. |
-% |
-% A mark contains a subexpression of the \ifcase ... \fi construct. |
-% \get*marks macros below extract the needed part using \ifcase. |
-% |
-% Another complication is to let the user choose whether \thischapter |
-% (\thissection) refers to the chapter (section) in effect at the top |
-% of a page, or that at the bottom of a page. The solution is |
-% described on page 260 of The TeXbook. It involves outputting two |
-% marks for the sectioning macros, one before the section break, and |
-% one after. I won't pretend I can describe this better than DEK... |
-\def\domark{% |
- \toks0=\expandafter{\lastchapterdefs}% |
- \toks2=\expandafter{\lastsectiondefs}% |
- \toks4=\expandafter{\prevchapterdefs}% |
- \toks6=\expandafter{\prevsectiondefs}% |
- \toks8=\expandafter{\lastcolordefs}% |
- \mark{% |
- \the\toks0 \the\toks2 |
- \noexpand\or \the\toks4 \the\toks6 |
- \noexpand\else \the\toks8 |
- }% |
-} |
-% \topmark doesn't work for the very first chapter (after the title |
-% page or the contents), so we use \firstmark there -- this gets us |
-% the mark with the chapter defs, unless the user sneaks in, e.g., |
-% @setcolor (or @url, or @link, etc.) between @contents and the very |
-% first @chapter. |
-\def\gettopheadingmarks{% |
- \ifcase0\topmark\fi |
- \ifx\thischapter\empty \ifcase0\firstmark\fi \fi |
-} |
-\def\getbottomheadingmarks{\ifcase1\botmark\fi} |
-\def\getcolormarks{\ifcase2\topmark\fi} |
- |
-% Avoid "undefined control sequence" errors. |
-\def\lastchapterdefs{} |
-\def\lastsectiondefs{} |
-\def\prevchapterdefs{} |
-\def\prevsectiondefs{} |
-\def\lastcolordefs{} |
- |
-% Main output routine. |
-\chardef\PAGE = 255 |
-\output = {\onepageout{\pagecontents\PAGE}} |
- |
-\newbox\headlinebox |
-\newbox\footlinebox |
- |
-% \onepageout takes a vbox as an argument. Note that \pagecontents |
-% does insertions, but you have to call it yourself. |
-\def\onepageout#1{% |
- \ifcropmarks \hoffset=0pt \else \hoffset=\normaloffset \fi |
- % |
- \ifodd\pageno \advance\hoffset by \bindingoffset |
- \else \advance\hoffset by -\bindingoffset\fi |
- % |
- % Do this outside of the \shipout so @code etc. will be expanded in |
- % the headline as they should be, not taken literally (outputting ''code). |
- \ifodd\pageno \getoddheadingmarks \else \getevenheadingmarks \fi |
- \setbox\headlinebox = \vbox{\let\hsize=\pagewidth \makeheadline}% |
- \ifodd\pageno \getoddfootingmarks \else \getevenfootingmarks \fi |
- \setbox\footlinebox = \vbox{\let\hsize=\pagewidth \makefootline}% |
- % |
- {% |
- % Have to do this stuff outside the \shipout because we want it to |
- % take effect in \write's, yet the group defined by the \vbox ends |
- % before the \shipout runs. |
- % |
- \indexdummies % don't expand commands in the output. |
- \normalturnoffactive % \ in index entries must not stay \, e.g., if |
- % the page break happens to be in the middle of an example. |
- % We don't want .vr (or whatever) entries like this: |
- % \entry{{\tt \indexbackslash }acronym}{32}{\code {\acronym}} |
- % "\acronym" won't work when it's read back in; |
- % it needs to be |
- % {\code {{\tt \backslashcurfont }acronym} |
- \shipout\vbox{% |
- % Do this early so pdf references go to the beginning of the page. |
- \ifpdfmakepagedest \pdfdest name{\the\pageno} xyz\fi |
- % |
- \ifcropmarks \vbox to \outervsize\bgroup |
- \hsize = \outerhsize |
- \vskip-\topandbottommargin |
- \vtop to0pt{% |
- \line{\ewtop\hfil\ewtop}% |
- \nointerlineskip |
- \line{% |
- \vbox{\moveleft\cornerthick\nstop}% |
- \hfill |
- \vbox{\moveright\cornerthick\nstop}% |
- }% |
- \vss}% |
- \vskip\topandbottommargin |
- \line\bgroup |
- \hfil % center the page within the outer (page) hsize. |
- \ifodd\pageno\hskip\bindingoffset\fi |
- \vbox\bgroup |
- \fi |
- % |
- \unvbox\headlinebox |
- \pagebody{#1}% |
- \ifdim\ht\footlinebox > 0pt |
- % Only leave this space if the footline is nonempty. |
- % (We lessened \vsize for it in \oddfootingyyy.) |
- % The \baselineskip=24pt in plain's \makefootline has no effect. |
- \vskip 24pt |
- \unvbox\footlinebox |
- \fi |
- % |
- \ifcropmarks |
- \egroup % end of \vbox\bgroup |
- \hfil\egroup % end of (centering) \line\bgroup |
- \vskip\topandbottommargin plus1fill minus1fill |
- \boxmaxdepth = \cornerthick |
- \vbox to0pt{\vss |
- \line{% |
- \vbox{\moveleft\cornerthick\nsbot}% |
- \hfill |
- \vbox{\moveright\cornerthick\nsbot}% |
- }% |
- \nointerlineskip |
- \line{\ewbot\hfil\ewbot}% |
- }% |
- \egroup % \vbox from first cropmarks clause |
- \fi |
- }% end of \shipout\vbox |
- }% end of group with \indexdummies |
- \advancepageno |
- \ifnum\outputpenalty>-20000 \else\dosupereject\fi |
-} |
- |
-\newinsert\margin \dimen\margin=\maxdimen |
- |
-\def\pagebody#1{\vbox to\pageheight{\boxmaxdepth=\maxdepth #1}} |
-{\catcode`\@ =11 |
-\gdef\pagecontents#1{\ifvoid\topins\else\unvbox\topins\fi |
-% marginal hacks, juha@viisa.uucp (Juha Takala) |
-\ifvoid\margin\else % marginal info is present |
- \rlap{\kern\hsize\vbox to\z@{\kern1pt\box\margin \vss}}\fi |
-\dimen@=\dp#1\relax \unvbox#1\relax |
-\ifvoid\footins\else\vskip\skip\footins\footnoterule \unvbox\footins\fi |
-\ifr@ggedbottom \kern-\dimen@ \vfil \fi} |
-} |
- |
-% Here are the rules for the cropmarks. Note that they are |
-% offset so that the space between them is truly \outerhsize or \outervsize |
-% (P. A. MacKay, 12 November, 1986) |
-% |
-\def\ewtop{\vrule height\cornerthick depth0pt width\cornerlong} |
-\def\nstop{\vbox |
- {\hrule height\cornerthick depth\cornerlong width\cornerthick}} |
-\def\ewbot{\vrule height0pt depth\cornerthick width\cornerlong} |
-\def\nsbot{\vbox |
- {\hrule height\cornerlong depth\cornerthick width\cornerthick}} |
- |
-% Parse an argument, then pass it to #1. The argument is the rest of |
-% the input line (except we remove a trailing comment). #1 should be a |
-% macro which expects an ordinary undelimited TeX argument. |
-% |
-\def\parsearg{\parseargusing{}} |
-\def\parseargusing#1#2{% |
- \def\argtorun{#2}% |
- \begingroup |
- \obeylines |
- \spaceisspace |
- #1% |
- \parseargline\empty% Insert the \empty token, see \finishparsearg below. |
-} |
- |
-{\obeylines % |
- \gdef\parseargline#1^^M{% |
- \endgroup % End of the group started in \parsearg. |
- \argremovecomment #1\comment\ArgTerm% |
- }% |
-} |
- |
-% First remove any @comment, then any @c comment. |
-\def\argremovecomment#1\comment#2\ArgTerm{\argremovec #1\c\ArgTerm} |
-\def\argremovec#1\c#2\ArgTerm{\argcheckspaces#1\^^M\ArgTerm} |
- |
-% Each occurrence of `\^^M' or `<space>\^^M' is replaced by a single space. |
-% |
-% \argremovec might leave us with trailing space, e.g., |
-% @end itemize @c foo |
-% This space token undergoes the same procedure and is eventually removed |
-% by \finishparsearg. |
-% |
-\def\argcheckspaces#1\^^M{\argcheckspacesX#1\^^M \^^M} |
-\def\argcheckspacesX#1 \^^M{\argcheckspacesY#1\^^M} |
-\def\argcheckspacesY#1\^^M#2\^^M#3\ArgTerm{% |
- \def\temp{#3}% |
- \ifx\temp\empty |
- % Do not use \next, perhaps the caller of \parsearg uses it; reuse \temp: |
- \let\temp\finishparsearg |
- \else |
- \let\temp\argcheckspaces |
- \fi |
- % Put the space token in: |
- \temp#1 #3\ArgTerm |
-} |
- |
-% If a _delimited_ argument is enclosed in braces, they get stripped; so |
-% to get _exactly_ the rest of the line, we had to prevent such situation. |
-% We prepended an \empty token at the very beginning and we expand it now, |
-% just before passing the control to \argtorun. |
-% (Similarly, we have to think about #3 of \argcheckspacesY above: it is |
-% either the null string, or it ends with \^^M---thus there is no danger |
-% that a pair of braces would be stripped. |
-% |
-% But first, we have to remove the trailing space token. |
-% |
-\def\finishparsearg#1 \ArgTerm{\expandafter\argtorun\expandafter{#1}} |
- |
-% \parseargdef\foo{...} |
-% is roughly equivalent to |
-% \def\foo{\parsearg\Xfoo} |
-% \def\Xfoo#1{...} |
-% |
-% Actually, I use \csname\string\foo\endcsname, ie. \\foo, as it is my |
-% favourite TeX trick. --kasal, 16nov03 |
- |
-\def\parseargdef#1{% |
- \expandafter \doparseargdef \csname\string#1\endcsname #1% |
-} |
-\def\doparseargdef#1#2{% |
- \def#2{\parsearg#1}% |
- \def#1##1% |
-} |
- |
-% Several utility definitions with active space: |
-{ |
- \obeyspaces |
- \gdef\obeyedspace{ } |
- |
- % Make each space character in the input produce a normal interword |
- % space in the output. Don't allow a line break at this space, as this |
- % is used only in environments like @example, where each line of input |
- % should produce a line of output anyway. |
- % |
- \gdef\sepspaces{\obeyspaces\let =\tie} |
- |
- % If an index command is used in an @example environment, any spaces |
- % therein should become regular spaces in the raw index file, not the |
- % expansion of \tie (\leavevmode \penalty \@M \ ). |
- \gdef\unsepspaces{\let =\space} |
-} |
- |
- |
-\def\flushcr{\ifx\par\lisppar \def\next##1{}\else \let\next=\relax \fi \next} |
- |
-% Define the framework for environments in texinfo.tex. It's used like this: |
-% |
-% \envdef\foo{...} |
-% \def\Efoo{...} |
-% |
-% It's the responsibility of \envdef to insert \begingroup before the |
-% actual body; @end closes the group after calling \Efoo. \envdef also |
-% defines \thisenv, so the current environment is known; @end checks |
-% whether the environment name matches. The \checkenv macro can also be |
-% used to check whether the current environment is the one expected. |
-% |
-% Non-false conditionals (@iftex, @ifset) don't fit into this, so they |
-% are not treated as environments; they don't open a group. (The |
-% implementation of @end takes care not to call \endgroup in this |
-% special case.) |
- |
- |
-% At run-time, environments start with this: |
-\def\startenvironment#1{\begingroup\def\thisenv{#1}} |
-% initialize |
-\let\thisenv\empty |
- |
-% ... but they get defined via ``\envdef\foo{...}'': |
-\long\def\envdef#1#2{\def#1{\startenvironment#1#2}} |
-\def\envparseargdef#1#2{\parseargdef#1{\startenvironment#1#2}} |
- |
-% Check whether we're in the right environment: |
-\def\checkenv#1{% |
- \def\temp{#1}% |
- \ifx\thisenv\temp |
- \else |
- \badenverr |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% Environment mismatch, #1 expected: |
-\def\badenverr{% |
- \errhelp = \EMsimple |
- \errmessage{This command can appear only \inenvironment\temp, |
- not \inenvironment\thisenv}% |
-} |
-\def\inenvironment#1{% |
- \ifx#1\empty |
- out of any environment% |
- \else |
- in environment \expandafter\string#1% |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% @end foo executes the definition of \Efoo. |
-% But first, it executes a specialized version of \checkenv |
-% |
-\parseargdef\end{% |
- \if 1\csname iscond.#1\endcsname |
- \else |
- % The general wording of \badenverr may not be ideal, but... --kasal, 06nov03 |
- \expandafter\checkenv\csname#1\endcsname |
- \csname E#1\endcsname |
- \endgroup |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-\newhelp\EMsimple{Press RETURN to continue.} |
- |
- |
-%% Simple single-character @ commands |
- |
-% @@ prints an @ |
-% Kludge this until the fonts are right (grr). |
-\def\@{{\tt\char64}} |
- |
-% This is turned off because it was never documented |
-% and you can use @w{...} around a quote to suppress ligatures. |
-%% Define @` and @' to be the same as ` and ' |
-%% but suppressing ligatures. |
-%\def\`{{`}} |
-%\def\'{{'}} |
- |
-% Used to generate quoted braces. |
-\def\mylbrace {{\tt\char123}} |
-\def\myrbrace {{\tt\char125}} |
-\let\{=\mylbrace |
-\let\}=\myrbrace |
-\begingroup |
- % Definitions to produce \{ and \} commands for indices, |
- % and @{ and @} for the aux/toc files. |
- \catcode`\{ = \other \catcode`\} = \other |
- \catcode`\[ = 1 \catcode`\] = 2 |
- \catcode`\! = 0 \catcode`\\ = \other |
- !gdef!lbracecmd[\{]% |
- !gdef!rbracecmd[\}]% |
- !gdef!lbraceatcmd[@{]% |
- !gdef!rbraceatcmd[@}]% |
-!endgroup |
- |
-% @comma{} to avoid , parsing problems. |
-\let\comma = , |
- |
-% Accents: @, @dotaccent @ringaccent @ubaraccent @udotaccent |
-% Others are defined by plain TeX: @` @' @" @^ @~ @= @u @v @H. |
-\let\, = \c |
-\let\dotaccent = \. |
-\def\ringaccent#1{{\accent23 #1}} |
-\let\tieaccent = \t |
-\let\ubaraccent = \b |
-\let\udotaccent = \d |
- |
-% Other special characters: @questiondown @exclamdown @ordf @ordm |
-% Plain TeX defines: @AA @AE @O @OE @L (plus lowercase versions) @ss. |
-\def\questiondown{?`} |
-\def\exclamdown{!`} |
-\def\ordf{\leavevmode\raise1ex\hbox{\selectfonts\lllsize \underbar{a}}} |
-\def\ordm{\leavevmode\raise1ex\hbox{\selectfonts\lllsize \underbar{o}}} |
- |
-% Dotless i and dotless j, used for accents. |
-\def\imacro{i} |
-\def\jmacro{j} |
-\def\dotless#1{% |
- \def\temp{#1}% |
- \ifx\temp\imacro \ifmmode\imath \else\ptexi \fi |
- \else\ifx\temp\jmacro \ifmmode\jmath \else\j \fi |
- \else \errmessage{@dotless can be used only with i or j}% |
- \fi\fi |
-} |
- |
-% The \TeX{} logo, as in plain, but resetting the spacing so that a |
-% period following counts as ending a sentence. (Idea found in latex.) |
-% |
-\edef\TeX{\TeX \spacefactor=1000 } |
- |
-% @LaTeX{} logo. Not quite the same results as the definition in |
-% latex.ltx, since we use a different font for the raised A; it's most |
-% convenient for us to use an explicitly smaller font, rather than using |
-% the \scriptstyle font (since we don't reset \scriptstyle and |
-% \scriptscriptstyle). |
-% |
-\def\LaTeX{% |
- L\kern-.36em |
- {\setbox0=\hbox{T}% |
- \vbox to \ht0{\hbox{\selectfonts\lllsize A}\vss}}% |
- \kern-.15em |
- \TeX |
-} |
- |
-% Be sure we're in horizontal mode when doing a tie, since we make space |
-% equivalent to this in @example-like environments. Otherwise, a space |
-% at the beginning of a line will start with \penalty -- and |
-% since \penalty is valid in vertical mode, we'd end up putting the |
-% penalty on the vertical list instead of in the new paragraph. |
-{\catcode`@ = 11 |
- % Avoid using \@M directly, because that causes trouble |
- % if the definition is written into an index file. |
- \global\let\tiepenalty = \@M |
- \gdef\tie{\leavevmode\penalty\tiepenalty\ } |
-} |
- |
-% @: forces normal size whitespace following. |
-\def\:{\spacefactor=1000 } |
- |
-% @* forces a line break. |
-\def\*{\hfil\break\hbox{}\ignorespaces} |
- |
-% @/ allows a line break. |
-\let\/=\allowbreak |
- |
-% @. is an end-of-sentence period. |
-\def\.{.\spacefactor=\endofsentencespacefactor\space} |
- |
-% @! is an end-of-sentence bang. |
-\def\!{!\spacefactor=\endofsentencespacefactor\space} |
- |
-% @? is an end-of-sentence query. |
-\def\?{?\spacefactor=\endofsentencespacefactor\space} |
- |
-% @frenchspacing on|off says whether to put extra space after punctuation. |
-% |
-\def\onword{on} |
-\def\offword{off} |
-% |
-\parseargdef\frenchspacing{% |
- \def\temp{#1}% |
- \ifx\temp\onword \plainfrenchspacing |
- \else\ifx\temp\offword \plainnonfrenchspacing |
- \else |
- \errhelp = \EMsimple |
- \errmessage{Unknown @frenchspacing option `\temp', must be on/off}% |
- \fi\fi |
-} |
- |
-% @w prevents a word break. Without the \leavevmode, @w at the |
-% beginning of a paragraph, when TeX is still in vertical mode, would |
-% produce a whole line of output instead of starting the paragraph. |
-\def\w#1{\leavevmode\hbox{#1}} |
- |
-% @group ... @end group forces ... to be all on one page, by enclosing |
-% it in a TeX vbox. We use \vtop instead of \vbox to construct the box |
-% to keep its height that of a normal line. According to the rules for |
-% \topskip (p.114 of the TeXbook), the glue inserted is |
-% max (\topskip - \ht (first item), 0). If that height is large, |
-% therefore, no glue is inserted, and the space between the headline and |
-% the text is small, which looks bad. |
-% |
-% Another complication is that the group might be very large. This can |
-% cause the glue on the previous page to be unduly stretched, because it |
-% does not have much material. In this case, it's better to add an |
-% explicit \vfill so that the extra space is at the bottom. The |
-% threshold for doing this is if the group is more than \vfilllimit |
-% percent of a page (\vfilllimit can be changed inside of @tex). |
-% |
-\newbox\groupbox |
-\def\vfilllimit{0.7} |
-% |
-\envdef\group{% |
- \ifnum\catcode`\^^M=\active \else |
- \errhelp = \groupinvalidhelp |
- \errmessage{@group invalid in context where filling is enabled}% |
- \fi |
- \startsavinginserts |
- % |
- \setbox\groupbox = \vtop\bgroup |
- % Do @comment since we are called inside an environment such as |
- % @example, where each end-of-line in the input causes an |
- % end-of-line in the output. We don't want the end-of-line after |
- % the `@group' to put extra space in the output. Since @group |
- % should appear on a line by itself (according to the Texinfo |
- % manual), we don't worry about eating any user text. |
- \comment |
-} |
-% |
-% The \vtop produces a box with normal height and large depth; thus, TeX puts |
-% \baselineskip glue before it, and (when the next line of text is done) |
-% \lineskip glue after it. Thus, space below is not quite equal to space |
-% above. But it's pretty close. |
-\def\Egroup{% |
- % To get correct interline space between the last line of the group |
- % and the first line afterwards, we have to propagate \prevdepth. |
- \endgraf % Not \par, as it may have been set to \lisppar. |
- \global\dimen1 = \prevdepth |
- \egroup % End the \vtop. |
- % \dimen0 is the vertical size of the group's box. |
- \dimen0 = \ht\groupbox \advance\dimen0 by \dp\groupbox |
- % \dimen2 is how much space is left on the page (more or less). |
- \dimen2 = \pageheight \advance\dimen2 by -\pagetotal |
- % if the group doesn't fit on the current page, and it's a big big |
- % group, force a page break. |
- \ifdim \dimen0 > \dimen2 |
- \ifdim \pagetotal < \vfilllimit\pageheight |
- \page |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \box\groupbox |
- \prevdepth = \dimen1 |
- \checkinserts |
-} |
-% |
-% TeX puts in an \escapechar (i.e., `@') at the beginning of the help |
-% message, so this ends up printing `@group can only ...'. |
-% |
-\newhelp\groupinvalidhelp{% |
-group can only be used in environments such as @example,^^J% |
-where each line of input produces a line of output.} |
- |
-% @need space-in-mils |
-% forces a page break if there is not space-in-mils remaining. |
- |
-\newdimen\mil \mil=0.001in |
- |
-% Old definition--didn't work. |
-%\parseargdef\need{\par % |
-%% This method tries to make TeX break the page naturally |
-%% if the depth of the box does not fit. |
-%{\baselineskip=0pt% |
-%\vtop to #1\mil{\vfil}\kern -#1\mil\nobreak |
-%\prevdepth=-1000pt |
-%}} |
- |
-\parseargdef\need{% |
- % Ensure vertical mode, so we don't make a big box in the middle of a |
- % paragraph. |
- \par |
- % |
- % If the @need value is less than one line space, it's useless. |
- \dimen0 = #1\mil |
- \dimen2 = \ht\strutbox |
- \advance\dimen2 by \dp\strutbox |
- \ifdim\dimen0 > \dimen2 |
- % |
- % Do a \strut just to make the height of this box be normal, so the |
- % normal leading is inserted relative to the preceding line. |
- % And a page break here is fine. |
- \vtop to #1\mil{\strut\vfil}% |
- % |
- % TeX does not even consider page breaks if a penalty added to the |
- % main vertical list is 10000 or more. But in order to see if the |
- % empty box we just added fits on the page, we must make it consider |
- % page breaks. On the other hand, we don't want to actually break the |
- % page after the empty box. So we use a penalty of 9999. |
- % |
- % There is an extremely small chance that TeX will actually break the |
- % page at this \penalty, if there are no other feasible breakpoints in |
- % sight. (If the user is using lots of big @group commands, which |
- % almost-but-not-quite fill up a page, TeX will have a hard time doing |
- % good page breaking, for example.) However, I could not construct an |
- % example where a page broke at this \penalty; if it happens in a real |
- % document, then we can reconsider our strategy. |
- \penalty9999 |
- % |
- % Back up by the size of the box, whether we did a page break or not. |
- \kern -#1\mil |
- % |
- % Do not allow a page break right after this kern. |
- \nobreak |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% @br forces paragraph break (and is undocumented). |
- |
-\let\br = \par |
- |
-% @page forces the start of a new page. |
-% |
-\def\page{\par\vfill\supereject} |
- |
-% @exdent text.... |
-% outputs text on separate line in roman font, starting at standard page margin |
- |
-% This records the amount of indent in the innermost environment. |
-% That's how much \exdent should take out. |
-\newskip\exdentamount |
- |
-% This defn is used inside fill environments such as @defun. |
-\parseargdef\exdent{\hfil\break\hbox{\kern -\exdentamount{\rm#1}}\hfil\break} |
- |
-% This defn is used inside nofill environments such as @example. |
-\parseargdef\nofillexdent{{\advance \leftskip by -\exdentamount |
- \leftline{\hskip\leftskip{\rm#1}}}} |
- |
-% @inmargin{WHICH}{TEXT} puts TEXT in the WHICH margin next to the current |
-% paragraph. For more general purposes, use the \margin insertion |
-% class. WHICH is `l' or `r'. |
-% |
-\newskip\inmarginspacing \inmarginspacing=1cm |
-\def\strutdepth{\dp\strutbox} |
-% |
-\def\doinmargin#1#2{\strut\vadjust{% |
- \nobreak |
- \kern-\strutdepth |
- \vtop to \strutdepth{% |
- \baselineskip=\strutdepth |
- \vss |
- % if you have multiple lines of stuff to put here, you'll need to |
- % make the vbox yourself of the appropriate size. |
- \ifx#1l% |
- \llap{\ignorespaces #2\hskip\inmarginspacing}% |
- \else |
- \rlap{\hskip\hsize \hskip\inmarginspacing \ignorespaces #2}% |
- \fi |
- \null |
- }% |
-}} |
-\def\inleftmargin{\doinmargin l} |
-\def\inrightmargin{\doinmargin r} |
-% |
-% @inmargin{TEXT [, RIGHT-TEXT]} |
-% (if RIGHT-TEXT is given, use TEXT for left page, RIGHT-TEXT for right; |
-% else use TEXT for both). |
-% |
-\def\inmargin#1{\parseinmargin #1,,\finish} |
-\def\parseinmargin#1,#2,#3\finish{% not perfect, but better than nothing. |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #2}% |
- \ifdim\wd0 > 0pt |
- \def\lefttext{#1}% have both texts |
- \def\righttext{#2}% |
- \else |
- \def\lefttext{#1}% have only one text |
- \def\righttext{#1}% |
- \fi |
- % |
- \ifodd\pageno |
- \def\temp{\inrightmargin\righttext}% odd page -> outside is right margin |
- \else |
- \def\temp{\inleftmargin\lefttext}% |
- \fi |
- \temp |
-} |
- |
-% @include FILE -- \input text of FILE. |
-% |
-\def\include{\parseargusing\filenamecatcodes\includezzz} |
-\def\includezzz#1{% |
- \pushthisfilestack |
- \def\thisfile{#1}% |
- {% |
- \makevalueexpandable % we want to expand any @value in FILE. |
- \turnoffactive % and allow special characters in the expansion |
- \edef\temp{\noexpand\input #1 }% |
- % |
- % This trickery is to read FILE outside of a group, in case it makes |
- % definitions, etc. |
- \expandafter |
- }\temp |
- \popthisfilestack |
-} |
-\def\filenamecatcodes{% |
- \catcode`\\=\other |
- \catcode`~=\other |
- \catcode`^=\other |
- \catcode`_=\other |
- \catcode`|=\other |
- \catcode`<=\other |
- \catcode`>=\other |
- \catcode`+=\other |
- \catcode`-=\other |
-} |
- |
-\def\pushthisfilestack{% |
- \expandafter\pushthisfilestackX\popthisfilestack\StackTerm |
-} |
-\def\pushthisfilestackX{% |
- \expandafter\pushthisfilestackY\thisfile\StackTerm |
-} |
-\def\pushthisfilestackY #1\StackTerm #2\StackTerm {% |
- \gdef\popthisfilestack{\gdef\thisfile{#1}\gdef\popthisfilestack{#2}}% |
-} |
- |
-\def\popthisfilestack{\errthisfilestackempty} |
-\def\errthisfilestackempty{\errmessage{Internal error: |
- the stack of filenames is empty.}} |
- |
-\def\thisfile{} |
- |
-% @center line |
-% outputs that line, centered. |
-% |
-\parseargdef\center{% |
- \ifhmode |
- \let\next\centerH |
- \else |
- \let\next\centerV |
- \fi |
- \next{\hfil \ignorespaces#1\unskip \hfil}% |
-} |
-\def\centerH#1{% |
- {% |
- \hfil\break |
- \advance\hsize by -\leftskip |
- \advance\hsize by -\rightskip |
- \line{#1}% |
- \break |
- }% |
-} |
-\def\centerV#1{\line{\kern\leftskip #1\kern\rightskip}} |
- |
-% @sp n outputs n lines of vertical space |
- |
-\parseargdef\sp{\vskip #1\baselineskip} |
- |
-% @comment ...line which is ignored... |
-% @c is the same as @comment |
-% @ignore ... @end ignore is another way to write a comment |
- |
-\def\comment{\begingroup \catcode`\^^M=\other% |
-\catcode`\@=\other \catcode`\{=\other \catcode`\}=\other% |
-\commentxxx} |
-{\catcode`\^^M=\other \gdef\commentxxx#1^^M{\endgroup}} |
- |
-\let\c=\comment |
- |
-% @paragraphindent NCHARS |
-% We'll use ems for NCHARS, close enough. |
-% NCHARS can also be the word `asis' or `none'. |
-% We cannot feasibly implement @paragraphindent asis, though. |
-% |
-\def\asisword{asis} % no translation, these are keywords |
-\def\noneword{none} |
-% |
-\parseargdef\paragraphindent{% |
- \def\temp{#1}% |
- \ifx\temp\asisword |
- \else |
- \ifx\temp\noneword |
- \defaultparindent = 0pt |
- \else |
- \defaultparindent = #1em |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \parindent = \defaultparindent |
-} |
- |
-% @exampleindent NCHARS |
-% We'll use ems for NCHARS like @paragraphindent. |
-% It seems @exampleindent asis isn't necessary, but |
-% I preserve it to make it similar to @paragraphindent. |
-\parseargdef\exampleindent{% |
- \def\temp{#1}% |
- \ifx\temp\asisword |
- \else |
- \ifx\temp\noneword |
- \lispnarrowing = 0pt |
- \else |
- \lispnarrowing = #1em |
- \fi |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% @firstparagraphindent WORD |
-% If WORD is `none', then suppress indentation of the first paragraph |
-% after a section heading. If WORD is `insert', then do indent at such |
-% paragraphs. |
-% |
-% The paragraph indentation is suppressed or not by calling |
-% \suppressfirstparagraphindent, which the sectioning commands do. |
-% We switch the definition of this back and forth according to WORD. |
-% By default, we suppress indentation. |
-% |
-\def\suppressfirstparagraphindent{\dosuppressfirstparagraphindent} |
-\def\insertword{insert} |
-% |
-\parseargdef\firstparagraphindent{% |
- \def\temp{#1}% |
- \ifx\temp\noneword |
- \let\suppressfirstparagraphindent = \dosuppressfirstparagraphindent |
- \else\ifx\temp\insertword |
- \let\suppressfirstparagraphindent = \relax |
- \else |
- \errhelp = \EMsimple |
- \errmessage{Unknown @firstparagraphindent option `\temp'}% |
- \fi\fi |
-} |
- |
-% Here is how we actually suppress indentation. Redefine \everypar to |
-% \kern backwards by \parindent, and then reset itself to empty. |
-% |
-% We also make \indent itself not actually do anything until the next |
-% paragraph. |
-% |
-\gdef\dosuppressfirstparagraphindent{% |
- \gdef\indent{% |
- \restorefirstparagraphindent |
- \indent |
- }% |
- \gdef\noindent{% |
- \restorefirstparagraphindent |
- \noindent |
- }% |
- \global\everypar = {% |
- \kern -\parindent |
- \restorefirstparagraphindent |
- }% |
-} |
- |
-\gdef\restorefirstparagraphindent{% |
- \global \let \indent = \ptexindent |
- \global \let \noindent = \ptexnoindent |
- \global \everypar = {}% |
-} |
- |
- |
-% @asis just yields its argument. Used with @table, for example. |
-% |
-\def\asis#1{#1} |
- |
-% @math outputs its argument in math mode. |
-% |
-% One complication: _ usually means subscripts, but it could also mean |
-% an actual _ character, as in @math{@var{some_variable} + 1}. So make |
-% _ active, and distinguish by seeing if the current family is \slfam, |
-% which is what @var uses. |
-{ |
- \catcode`\_ = \active |
- \gdef\mathunderscore{% |
- \catcode`\_=\active |
- \def_{\ifnum\fam=\slfam \_\else\sb\fi}% |
- } |
-} |
-% Another complication: we want \\ (and @\) to output a \ character. |
-% FYI, plain.tex uses \\ as a temporary control sequence (why?), but |
-% this is not advertised and we don't care. Texinfo does not |
-% otherwise define @\. |
-% |
-% The \mathchar is class=0=ordinary, family=7=ttfam, position=5C=\. |
-\def\mathbackslash{\ifnum\fam=\ttfam \mathchar"075C \else\backslash \fi} |
-% |
-\def\math{% |
- \tex |
- \mathunderscore |
- \let\\ = \mathbackslash |
- \mathactive |
- % make the texinfo accent commands work in math mode |
- \let\"=\ddot |
- \let\'=\acute |
- \let\==\bar |
- \let\^=\hat |
- \let\`=\grave |
- \let\u=\breve |
- \let\v=\check |
- \let\~=\tilde |
- \let\dotaccent=\dot |
- $\finishmath |
-} |
-\def\finishmath#1{#1$\endgroup} % Close the group opened by \tex. |
- |
-% Some active characters (such as <) are spaced differently in math. |
-% We have to reset their definitions in case the @math was an argument |
-% to a command which sets the catcodes (such as @item or @section). |
-% |
-{ |
- \catcode`^ = \active |
- \catcode`< = \active |
- \catcode`> = \active |
- \catcode`+ = \active |
- \gdef\mathactive{% |
- \let^ = \ptexhat |
- \let< = \ptexless |
- \let> = \ptexgtr |
- \let+ = \ptexplus |
- } |
-} |
- |
-% Some math mode symbols. |
-\def\bullet{$\ptexbullet$} |
-\def\geq{\ifmmode \ge\else $\ge$\fi} |
-\def\leq{\ifmmode \le\else $\le$\fi} |
-\def\minus{\ifmmode -\else $-$\fi} |
- |
-% @dots{} outputs an ellipsis using the current font. |
-% We do .5em per period so that it has the same spacing in the cm |
-% typewriter fonts as three actual period characters; on the other hand, |
-% in other typewriter fonts three periods are wider than 1.5em. So do |
-% whichever is larger. |
-% |
-\def\dots{% |
- \leavevmode |
- \setbox0=\hbox{...}% get width of three periods |
- \ifdim\wd0 > 1.5em |
- \dimen0 = \wd0 |
- \else |
- \dimen0 = 1.5em |
- \fi |
- \hbox to \dimen0{% |
- \hskip 0pt plus.25fil |
- .\hskip 0pt plus1fil |
- .\hskip 0pt plus1fil |
- .\hskip 0pt plus.5fil |
- }% |
-} |
- |
-% @enddots{} is an end-of-sentence ellipsis. |
-% |
-\def\enddots{% |
- \dots |
- \spacefactor=\endofsentencespacefactor |
-} |
- |
-% @comma{} is so commas can be inserted into text without messing up |
-% Texinfo's parsing. |
-% |
-\let\comma = , |
- |
-% @refill is a no-op. |
-\let\refill=\relax |
- |
-% If working on a large document in chapters, it is convenient to |
-% be able to disable indexing, cross-referencing, and contents, for test runs. |
-% This is done with @novalidate (before @setfilename). |
-% |
-\newif\iflinks \linkstrue % by default we want the aux files. |
-\let\novalidate = \linksfalse |
- |
-% @setfilename is done at the beginning of every texinfo file. |
-% So open here the files we need to have open while reading the input. |
-% This makes it possible to make a .fmt file for texinfo. |
-\def\setfilename{% |
- \fixbackslash % Turn off hack to swallow `\input texinfo'. |
- \iflinks |
- \tryauxfile |
- % Open the new aux file. TeX will close it automatically at exit. |
- \immediate\openout\auxfile=\jobname.aux |
- \fi % \openindices needs to do some work in any case. |
- \openindices |
- \let\setfilename=\comment % Ignore extra @setfilename cmds. |
- % |
- % If texinfo.cnf is present on the system, read it. |
- % Useful for site-wide @afourpaper, etc. |
- \openin 1 texinfo.cnf |
- \ifeof 1 \else \input texinfo.cnf \fi |
- \closein 1 |
- % |
- \comment % Ignore the actual filename. |
-} |
- |
-% Called from \setfilename. |
-% |
-\def\openindices{% |
- \newindex{cp}% |
- \newcodeindex{fn}% |
- \newcodeindex{vr}% |
- \newcodeindex{tp}% |
- \newcodeindex{ky}% |
- \newcodeindex{pg}% |
-} |
- |
-% @bye. |
-\outer\def\bye{\pagealignmacro\tracingstats=1\ptexend} |
- |
- |
-\message{pdf,} |
-% adobe `portable' document format |
-\newcount\tempnum |
-\newcount\lnkcount |
-\newtoks\filename |
-\newcount\filenamelength |
-\newcount\pgn |
-\newtoks\toksA |
-\newtoks\toksB |
-\newtoks\toksC |
-\newtoks\toksD |
-\newbox\boxA |
-\newcount\countA |
-\newif\ifpdf |
-\newif\ifpdfmakepagedest |
- |
-% when pdftex is run in dvi mode, \pdfoutput is defined (so \pdfoutput=1 |
-% can be set). So we test for \relax and 0 as well as \undefined, |
-% borrowed from ifpdf.sty. |
-\ifx\pdfoutput\undefined |
-\else |
- \ifx\pdfoutput\relax |
- \else |
- \ifcase\pdfoutput |
- \else |
- \pdftrue |
- \fi |
- \fi |
-\fi |
- |
-% PDF uses PostScript string constants for the names of xref targets, |
-% for display in the outlines, and in other places. Thus, we have to |
-% double any backslashes. Otherwise, a name like "\node" will be |
-% interpreted as a newline (\n), followed by o, d, e. Not good. |
-% http://www.ntg.nl/pipermail/ntg-pdftex/2004-July/000654.html |
-% (and related messages, the final outcome is that it is up to the TeX |
-% user to double the backslashes and otherwise make the string valid, so |
-% that's what we do). |
- |
-% double active backslashes. |
-% |
-{\catcode`\@=0 \catcode`\\=\active |
- @gdef@activebackslashdouble{% |
- @catcode`@\=@active |
- @let\=@doublebackslash} |
-} |
- |
-% To handle parens, we must adopt a different approach, since parens are |
-% not active characters. hyperref.dtx (which has the same problem as |
-% us) handles it with this amazing macro to replace tokens, with minor |
-% changes for Texinfo. It is included here under the GPL by permission |
-% from the author, Heiko Oberdiek. |
-% |
-% #1 is the tokens to replace. |
-% #2 is the replacement. |
-% #3 is the control sequence with the string. |
-% |
-\def\HyPsdSubst#1#2#3{% |
- \def\HyPsdReplace##1#1##2\END{% |
- ##1% |
- \ifx\\##2\\% |
- \else |
- #2% |
- \HyReturnAfterFi{% |
- \HyPsdReplace##2\END |
- }% |
- \fi |
- }% |
- \xdef#3{\expandafter\HyPsdReplace#3#1\END}% |
-} |
-\long\def\HyReturnAfterFi#1\fi{\fi#1} |
- |
-% #1 is a control sequence in which to do the replacements. |
-\def\backslashparens#1{% |
- \xdef#1{#1}% redefine it as its expansion; the definition is simply |
- % \lastnode when called from \setref -> \pdfmkdest. |
- \HyPsdSubst{(}{\realbackslash(}{#1}% |
- \HyPsdSubst{)}{\realbackslash)}{#1}% |
-} |
- |
-\newhelp\nopdfimagehelp{Texinfo supports .png, .jpg, .jpeg, and .pdf images |
-with PDF output, and none of those formats could be found. (.eps cannot |
-be supported due to the design of the PDF format; use regular TeX (DVI |
-output) for that.)} |
- |
-\ifpdf |
- % |
- % Color manipulation macros based on pdfcolor.tex. |
- \def\cmykDarkRed{0.28 1 1 0.35} |
- \def\cmykBlack{0 0 0 1} |
- % |
- \def\pdfsetcolor#1{\pdfliteral{#1 k}} |
- % Set color, and create a mark which defines \thiscolor accordingly, |
- % so that \makeheadline knows which color to restore. |
- \def\setcolor#1{% |
- \xdef\lastcolordefs{\gdef\noexpand\thiscolor{#1}}% |
- \domark |
- \pdfsetcolor{#1}% |
- } |
- % |
- \def\maincolor{\cmykBlack} |
- \pdfsetcolor{\maincolor} |
- \edef\thiscolor{\maincolor} |
- \def\lastcolordefs{} |
- % |
- \def\makefootline{% |
- \baselineskip24pt |
- \line{\pdfsetcolor{\maincolor}\the\footline}% |
- } |
- % |
- \def\makeheadline{% |
- \vbox to 0pt{% |
- \vskip-22.5pt |
- \line{% |
- \vbox to8.5pt{}% |
- % Extract \thiscolor definition from the marks. |
- \getcolormarks |
- % Typeset the headline with \maincolor, then restore the color. |
- \pdfsetcolor{\maincolor}\the\headline\pdfsetcolor{\thiscolor}% |
- }% |
- \vss |
- }% |
- \nointerlineskip |
- } |
- % |
- % |
- \pdfcatalog{/PageMode /UseOutlines} |
- % |
- % #1 is image name, #2 width (might be empty/whitespace), #3 height (ditto). |
- \def\dopdfimage#1#2#3{% |
- \def\imagewidth{#2}\setbox0 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #2}% |
- \def\imageheight{#3}\setbox2 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #3}% |
- % |
- % pdftex (and the PDF format) support .png, .jpg, .pdf (among |
- % others). Let's try in that order. |
- \let\pdfimgext=\empty |
- \begingroup |
- \openin 1 #1.png \ifeof 1 |
- \openin 1 #1.jpg \ifeof 1 |
- \openin 1 #1.jpeg \ifeof 1 |
- \openin 1 #1.JPG \ifeof 1 |
- \openin 1 #1.pdf \ifeof 1 |
- \openin 1 #1.PDF \ifeof 1 |
- \errhelp = \nopdfimagehelp |
- \errmessage{Could not find image file #1 for pdf}% |
- \else \gdef\pdfimgext{PDF}% |
- \fi |
- \else \gdef\pdfimgext{pdf}% |
- \fi |
- \else \gdef\pdfimgext{JPG}% |
- \fi |
- \else \gdef\pdfimgext{jpeg}% |
- \fi |
- \else \gdef\pdfimgext{jpg}% |
- \fi |
- \else \gdef\pdfimgext{png}% |
- \fi |
- \closein 1 |
- \endgroup |
- % |
- % without \immediate, ancient pdftex seg faults when the same image is |
- % included twice. (Version 3.14159-pre-1.0-unofficial-20010704.) |
- \ifnum\pdftexversion < 14 |
- \immediate\pdfimage |
- \else |
- \immediate\pdfximage |
- \fi |
- \ifdim \wd0 >0pt width \imagewidth \fi |
- \ifdim \wd2 >0pt height \imageheight \fi |
- \ifnum\pdftexversion<13 |
- #1.\pdfimgext |
- \else |
- {#1.\pdfimgext}% |
- \fi |
- \ifnum\pdftexversion < 14 \else |
- \pdfrefximage \pdflastximage |
- \fi} |
- % |
- \def\pdfmkdest#1{{% |
- % We have to set dummies so commands such as @code, and characters |
- % such as \, aren't expanded when present in a section title. |
- \indexnofonts |
- \turnoffactive |
- \activebackslashdouble |
- \makevalueexpandable |
- \def\pdfdestname{#1}% |
- \backslashparens\pdfdestname |
- \safewhatsit{\pdfdest name{\pdfdestname} xyz}% |
- }} |
- % |
- % used to mark target names; must be expandable. |
- \def\pdfmkpgn#1{#1} |
- % |
- % by default, use a color that is dark enough to print on paper as |
- % nearly black, but still distinguishable for online viewing. |
- \def\urlcolor{\cmykDarkRed} |
- \def\linkcolor{\cmykDarkRed} |
- \def\endlink{\setcolor{\maincolor}\pdfendlink} |
- % |
- % Adding outlines to PDF; macros for calculating structure of outlines |
- % come from Petr Olsak |
- \def\expnumber#1{\expandafter\ifx\csname#1\endcsname\relax 0% |
- \else \csname#1\endcsname \fi} |
- \def\advancenumber#1{\tempnum=\expnumber{#1}\relax |
- \advance\tempnum by 1 |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname#1\endcsname{\the\tempnum}} |
- % |
- % #1 is the section text, which is what will be displayed in the |
- % outline by the pdf viewer. #2 is the pdf expression for the number |
- % of subentries (or empty, for subsubsections). #3 is the node text, |
- % which might be empty if this toc entry had no corresponding node. |
- % #4 is the page number |
- % |
- \def\dopdfoutline#1#2#3#4{% |
- % Generate a link to the node text if that exists; else, use the |
- % page number. We could generate a destination for the section |
- % text in the case where a section has no node, but it doesn't |
- % seem worth the trouble, since most documents are normally structured. |
- \def\pdfoutlinedest{#3}% |
- \ifx\pdfoutlinedest\empty |
- \def\pdfoutlinedest{#4}% |
- \else |
- % Doubled backslashes in the name. |
- {\activebackslashdouble \xdef\pdfoutlinedest{#3}% |
- \backslashparens\pdfoutlinedest}% |
- \fi |
- % |
- % Also double the backslashes in the display string. |
- {\activebackslashdouble \xdef\pdfoutlinetext{#1}% |
- \backslashparens\pdfoutlinetext}% |
- % |
- \pdfoutline goto name{\pdfmkpgn{\pdfoutlinedest}}#2{\pdfoutlinetext}% |
- } |
- % |
- \def\pdfmakeoutlines{% |
- \begingroup |
- % Thanh's hack / proper braces in bookmarks |
- \edef\mylbrace{\iftrue \string{\else}\fi}\let\{=\mylbrace |
- \edef\myrbrace{\iffalse{\else\string}\fi}\let\}=\myrbrace |
- % |
- % Read toc silently, to get counts of subentries for \pdfoutline. |
- \def\numchapentry##1##2##3##4{% |
- \def\thischapnum{##2}% |
- \def\thissecnum{0}% |
- \def\thissubsecnum{0}% |
- }% |
- \def\numsecentry##1##2##3##4{% |
- \advancenumber{chap\thischapnum}% |
- \def\thissecnum{##2}% |
- \def\thissubsecnum{0}% |
- }% |
- \def\numsubsecentry##1##2##3##4{% |
- \advancenumber{sec\thissecnum}% |
- \def\thissubsecnum{##2}% |
- }% |
- \def\numsubsubsecentry##1##2##3##4{% |
- \advancenumber{subsec\thissubsecnum}% |
- }% |
- \def\thischapnum{0}% |
- \def\thissecnum{0}% |
- \def\thissubsecnum{0}% |
- % |
- % use \def rather than \let here because we redefine \chapentry et |
- % al. a second time, below. |
- \def\appentry{\numchapentry}% |
- \def\appsecentry{\numsecentry}% |
- \def\appsubsecentry{\numsubsecentry}% |
- \def\appsubsubsecentry{\numsubsubsecentry}% |
- \def\unnchapentry{\numchapentry}% |
- \def\unnsecentry{\numsecentry}% |
- \def\unnsubsecentry{\numsubsecentry}% |
- \def\unnsubsubsecentry{\numsubsubsecentry}% |
- \readdatafile{toc}% |
- % |
- % Read toc second time, this time actually producing the outlines. |
- % The `-' means take the \expnumber as the absolute number of |
- % subentries, which we calculated on our first read of the .toc above. |
- % |
- % We use the node names as the destinations. |
- \def\numchapentry##1##2##3##4{% |
- \dopdfoutline{##1}{count-\expnumber{chap##2}}{##3}{##4}}% |
- \def\numsecentry##1##2##3##4{% |
- \dopdfoutline{##1}{count-\expnumber{sec##2}}{##3}{##4}}% |
- \def\numsubsecentry##1##2##3##4{% |
- \dopdfoutline{##1}{count-\expnumber{subsec##2}}{##3}{##4}}% |
- \def\numsubsubsecentry##1##2##3##4{% count is always zero |
- \dopdfoutline{##1}{}{##3}{##4}}% |
- % |
- % PDF outlines are displayed using system fonts, instead of |
- % document fonts. Therefore we cannot use special characters, |
- % since the encoding is unknown. For example, the eogonek from |
- % Latin 2 (0xea) gets translated to a | character. Info from |
- % Staszek Wawrykiewicz, 19 Jan 2004 04:09:24 +0100. |
- % |
- % xx to do this right, we have to translate 8-bit characters to |
- % their "best" equivalent, based on the @documentencoding. Right |
- % now, I guess we'll just let the pdf reader have its way. |
- \indexnofonts |
- \setupdatafile |
- \catcode`\\=\active \otherbackslash |
- \input \tocreadfilename |
- \endgroup |
- } |
- % |
- \def\skipspaces#1{\def\PP{#1}\def\D{|}% |
- \ifx\PP\D\let\nextsp\relax |
- \else\let\nextsp\skipspaces |
- \ifx\p\space\else\addtokens{\filename}{\PP}% |
- \advance\filenamelength by 1 |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \nextsp} |
- \def\getfilename#1{\filenamelength=0\expandafter\skipspaces#1|\relax} |
- \ifnum\pdftexversion < 14 |
- \let \startlink \pdfannotlink |
- \else |
- \let \startlink \pdfstartlink |
- \fi |
- % make a live url in pdf output. |
- \def\pdfurl#1{% |
- \begingroup |
- % it seems we really need yet another set of dummies; have not |
- % tried to figure out what each command should do in the context |
- % of @url. for now, just make @/ a no-op, that's the only one |
- % people have actually reported a problem with. |
- % |
- \normalturnoffactive |
- \def\@{@}% |
- \let\/=\empty |
- \makevalueexpandable |
- \leavevmode\setcolor{\urlcolor}% |
- \startlink attr{/Border [0 0 0]}% |
- user{/Subtype /Link /A << /S /URI /URI (#1) >>}% |
- \endgroup} |
- \def\pdfgettoks#1.{\setbox\boxA=\hbox{\toksA={#1.}\toksB={}\maketoks}} |
- \def\addtokens#1#2{\edef\addtoks{\noexpand#1={\the#1#2}}\addtoks} |
- \def\adn#1{\addtokens{\toksC}{#1}\global\countA=1\let\next=\maketoks} |
- \def\poptoks#1#2|ENDTOKS|{\let\first=#1\toksD={#1}\toksA={#2}} |
- \def\maketoks{% |
- \expandafter\poptoks\the\toksA|ENDTOKS|\relax |
- \ifx\first0\adn0 |
- \else\ifx\first1\adn1 \else\ifx\first2\adn2 \else\ifx\first3\adn3 |
- \else\ifx\first4\adn4 \else\ifx\first5\adn5 \else\ifx\first6\adn6 |
- \else\ifx\first7\adn7 \else\ifx\first8\adn8 \else\ifx\first9\adn9 |
- \else |
- \ifnum0=\countA\else\makelink\fi |
- \ifx\first.\let\next=\done\else |
- \let\next=\maketoks |
- \addtokens{\toksB}{\the\toksD} |
- \ifx\first,\addtokens{\toksB}{\space}\fi |
- \fi |
- \fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi |
- \next} |
- \def\makelink{\addtokens{\toksB}% |
- {\noexpand\pdflink{\the\toksC}}\toksC={}\global\countA=0} |
- \def\pdflink#1{% |
- \startlink attr{/Border [0 0 0]} goto name{\pdfmkpgn{#1}} |
- \setcolor{\linkcolor}#1\endlink} |
- \def\done{\edef\st{\global\noexpand\toksA={\the\toksB}}\st} |
-\else |
- \let\pdfmkdest = \gobble |
- \let\pdfurl = \gobble |
- \let\endlink = \relax |
- \let\setcolor = \gobble |
- \let\pdfsetcolor = \gobble |
- \let\pdfmakeoutlines = \relax |
-\fi % \ifx\pdfoutput |
- |
- |
-\message{fonts,} |
- |
-% Change the current font style to #1, remembering it in \curfontstyle. |
-% For now, we do not accumulate font styles: @b{@i{foo}} prints foo in |
-% italics, not bold italics. |
-% |
-\def\setfontstyle#1{% |
- \def\curfontstyle{#1}% not as a control sequence, because we are \edef'd. |
- \csname ten#1\endcsname % change the current font |
-} |
- |
-% Select #1 fonts with the current style. |
-% |
-\def\selectfonts#1{\csname #1fonts\endcsname \csname\curfontstyle\endcsname} |
- |
-\def\rm{\fam=0 \setfontstyle{rm}} |
-\def\it{\fam=\itfam \setfontstyle{it}} |
-\def\sl{\fam=\slfam \setfontstyle{sl}} |
-\def\bf{\fam=\bffam \setfontstyle{bf}}\def\bfstylename{bf} |
-\def\tt{\fam=\ttfam \setfontstyle{tt}} |
- |
-% Texinfo sort of supports the sans serif font style, which plain TeX does not. |
-% So we set up a \sf. |
-\newfam\sffam |
-\def\sf{\fam=\sffam \setfontstyle{sf}} |
-\let\li = \sf % Sometimes we call it \li, not \sf. |
- |
-% We don't need math for this font style. |
-\def\ttsl{\setfontstyle{ttsl}} |
- |
- |
-% Default leading. |
-\newdimen\textleading \textleading = 13.2pt |
- |
-% Set the baselineskip to #1, and the lineskip and strut size |
-% correspondingly. There is no deep meaning behind these magic numbers |
-% used as factors; they just match (closely enough) what Knuth defined. |
-% |
-\def\lineskipfactor{.08333} |
-\def\strutheightpercent{.70833} |
-\def\strutdepthpercent {.29167} |
-% |
-% can get a sort of poor man's double spacing by redefining this. |
-\def\baselinefactor{1} |
-% |
-\def\setleading#1{% |
- \dimen0 = #1\relax |
- \normalbaselineskip = \baselinefactor\dimen0 |
- \normallineskip = \lineskipfactor\normalbaselineskip |
- \normalbaselines |
- \setbox\strutbox =\hbox{% |
- \vrule width0pt height\strutheightpercent\baselineskip |
- depth \strutdepthpercent \baselineskip |
- }% |
-} |
- |
-% PDF CMaps. See also LaTeX's t1.cmap. |
-% |
-% do nothing with this by default. |
-\expandafter\let\csname cmapOT1\endcsname\gobble |
-\expandafter\let\csname cmapOT1IT\endcsname\gobble |
-\expandafter\let\csname cmapOT1TT\endcsname\gobble |
- |
-% if we are producing pdf, and we have \pdffontattr, then define cmaps. |
-% (\pdffontattr was introduced many years ago, but people still run |
-% older pdftex's; it's easy to conditionalize, so we do.) |
-\ifpdf \ifx\pdffontattr\undefined \else |
- \begingroup |
- \catcode`\^^M=\active \def^^M{^^J}% Output line endings as the ^^J char. |
- \catcode`\%=12 \immediate\pdfobj stream {%!PS-Adobe-3.0 Resource-CMap |
-%%DocumentNeededResources: ProcSet (CIDInit) |
-%%IncludeResource: ProcSet (CIDInit) |
-%%BeginResource: CMap (TeX-OT1-0) |
-%%Title: (TeX-OT1-0 TeX OT1 0) |
-%%Version: 1.000 |
-%%EndComments |
-/CIDInit /ProcSet findresource begin |
-12 dict begin |
-begincmap |
-/CIDSystemInfo |
-<< /Registry (TeX) |
-/Ordering (OT1) |
-/Supplement 0 |
->> def |
-/CMapName /TeX-OT1-0 def |
-/CMapType 2 def |
-1 begincodespacerange |
-<00> <7F> |
-endcodespacerange |
-8 beginbfrange |
-<00> <01> <0393> |
-<09> <0A> <03A8> |
-<23> <26> <0023> |
-<28> <3B> <0028> |
-<3F> <5B> <003F> |
-<5D> <5E> <005D> |
-<61> <7A> <0061> |
-<7B> <7C> <2013> |
-endbfrange |
-40 beginbfchar |
-<02> <0398> |
-<03> <039B> |
-<04> <039E> |
-<05> <03A0> |
-<06> <03A3> |
-<07> <03D2> |
-<08> <03A6> |
-<0B> <00660066> |
-<0C> <00660069> |
-<0D> <0066006C> |
-<0E> <006600660069> |
-<0F> <00660066006C> |
-<10> <0131> |
-<11> <0237> |
-<12> <0060> |
-<13> <00B4> |
-<14> <02C7> |
-<15> <02D8> |
-<16> <00AF> |
-<17> <02DA> |
-<18> <00B8> |
-<19> <00DF> |
-<1A> <00E6> |
-<1B> <0153> |
-<1C> <00F8> |
-<1D> <00C6> |
-<1E> <0152> |
-<1F> <00D8> |
-<21> <0021> |
-<22> <201D> |
-<27> <2019> |
-<3C> <00A1> |
-<3D> <003D> |
-<3E> <00BF> |
-<5C> <201C> |
-<5F> <02D9> |
-<60> <2018> |
-<7D> <02DD> |
-<7E> <007E> |
-<7F> <00A8> |
-endbfchar |
-endcmap |
-CMapName currentdict /CMap defineresource pop |
-end |
-end |
-%%EndResource |
-%%EOF |
- }\endgroup |
- \expandafter\edef\csname cmapOT1\endcsname#1{% |
- \pdffontattr#1{/ToUnicode \the\pdflastobj\space 0 R}% |
- }% |
-% |
-% \cmapOT1IT |
- \begingroup |
- \catcode`\^^M=\active \def^^M{^^J}% Output line endings as the ^^J char. |
- \catcode`\%=12 \immediate\pdfobj stream {%!PS-Adobe-3.0 Resource-CMap |
-%%DocumentNeededResources: ProcSet (CIDInit) |
-%%IncludeResource: ProcSet (CIDInit) |
-%%BeginResource: CMap (TeX-OT1IT-0) |
-%%Title: (TeX-OT1IT-0 TeX OT1IT 0) |
-%%Version: 1.000 |
-%%EndComments |
-/CIDInit /ProcSet findresource begin |
-12 dict begin |
-begincmap |
-/CIDSystemInfo |
-<< /Registry (TeX) |
-/Ordering (OT1IT) |
-/Supplement 0 |
->> def |
-/CMapName /TeX-OT1IT-0 def |
-/CMapType 2 def |
-1 begincodespacerange |
-<00> <7F> |
-endcodespacerange |
-8 beginbfrange |
-<00> <01> <0393> |
-<09> <0A> <03A8> |
-<25> <26> <0025> |
-<28> <3B> <0028> |
-<3F> <5B> <003F> |
-<5D> <5E> <005D> |
-<61> <7A> <0061> |
-<7B> <7C> <2013> |
-endbfrange |
-42 beginbfchar |
-<02> <0398> |
-<03> <039B> |
-<04> <039E> |
-<05> <03A0> |
-<06> <03A3> |
-<07> <03D2> |
-<08> <03A6> |
-<0B> <00660066> |
-<0C> <00660069> |
-<0D> <0066006C> |
-<0E> <006600660069> |
-<0F> <00660066006C> |
-<10> <0131> |
-<11> <0237> |
-<12> <0060> |
-<13> <00B4> |
-<14> <02C7> |
-<15> <02D8> |
-<16> <00AF> |
-<17> <02DA> |
-<18> <00B8> |
-<19> <00DF> |
-<1A> <00E6> |
-<1B> <0153> |
-<1C> <00F8> |
-<1D> <00C6> |
-<1E> <0152> |
-<1F> <00D8> |
-<21> <0021> |
-<22> <201D> |
-<23> <0023> |
-<24> <00A3> |
-<27> <2019> |
-<3C> <00A1> |
-<3D> <003D> |
-<3E> <00BF> |
-<5C> <201C> |
-<5F> <02D9> |
-<60> <2018> |
-<7D> <02DD> |
-<7E> <007E> |
-<7F> <00A8> |
-endbfchar |
-endcmap |
-CMapName currentdict /CMap defineresource pop |
-end |
-end |
-%%EndResource |
-%%EOF |
- }\endgroup |
- \expandafter\edef\csname cmapOT1IT\endcsname#1{% |
- \pdffontattr#1{/ToUnicode \the\pdflastobj\space 0 R}% |
- }% |
-% |
-% \cmapOT1TT |
- \begingroup |
- \catcode`\^^M=\active \def^^M{^^J}% Output line endings as the ^^J char. |
- \catcode`\%=12 \immediate\pdfobj stream {%!PS-Adobe-3.0 Resource-CMap |
-%%DocumentNeededResources: ProcSet (CIDInit) |
-%%IncludeResource: ProcSet (CIDInit) |
-%%BeginResource: CMap (TeX-OT1TT-0) |
-%%Title: (TeX-OT1TT-0 TeX OT1TT 0) |
-%%Version: 1.000 |
-%%EndComments |
-/CIDInit /ProcSet findresource begin |
-12 dict begin |
-begincmap |
-/CIDSystemInfo |
-<< /Registry (TeX) |
-/Ordering (OT1TT) |
-/Supplement 0 |
->> def |
-/CMapName /TeX-OT1TT-0 def |
-/CMapType 2 def |
-1 begincodespacerange |
-<00> <7F> |
-endcodespacerange |
-5 beginbfrange |
-<00> <01> <0393> |
-<09> <0A> <03A8> |
-<21> <26> <0021> |
-<28> <5F> <0028> |
-<61> <7E> <0061> |
-endbfrange |
-32 beginbfchar |
-<02> <0398> |
-<03> <039B> |
-<04> <039E> |
-<05> <03A0> |
-<06> <03A3> |
-<07> <03D2> |
-<08> <03A6> |
-<0B> <2191> |
-<0C> <2193> |
-<0D> <0027> |
-<0E> <00A1> |
-<0F> <00BF> |
-<10> <0131> |
-<11> <0237> |
-<12> <0060> |
-<13> <00B4> |
-<14> <02C7> |
-<15> <02D8> |
-<16> <00AF> |
-<17> <02DA> |
-<18> <00B8> |
-<19> <00DF> |
-<1A> <00E6> |
-<1B> <0153> |
-<1C> <00F8> |
-<1D> <00C6> |
-<1E> <0152> |
-<1F> <00D8> |
-<20> <2423> |
-<27> <2019> |
-<60> <2018> |
-<7F> <00A8> |
-endbfchar |
-endcmap |
-CMapName currentdict /CMap defineresource pop |
-end |
-end |
-%%EndResource |
-%%EOF |
- }\endgroup |
- \expandafter\edef\csname cmapOT1TT\endcsname#1{% |
- \pdffontattr#1{/ToUnicode \the\pdflastobj\space 0 R}% |
- }% |
-\fi\fi |
- |
- |
-% Set the font macro #1 to the font named #2, adding on the |
-% specified font prefix (normally `cm'). |
-% #3 is the font's design size, #4 is a scale factor, #5 is the CMap |
-% encoding (currently only OT1, OT1IT and OT1TT are allowed, pass |
-% empty to omit). |
-\def\setfont#1#2#3#4#5{% |
- \font#1=\fontprefix#2#3 scaled #4 |
- \csname cmap#5\endcsname#1% |
-} |
-% This is what gets called when #5 of \setfont is empty. |
-\let\cmap\gobble |
-% emacs-page end of cmaps |
- |
-% Use cm as the default font prefix. |
-% To specify the font prefix, you must define \fontprefix |
-% before you read in texinfo.tex. |
-\ifx\fontprefix\undefined |
-\def\fontprefix{cm} |
-\fi |
-% Support font families that don't use the same naming scheme as CM. |
-\def\rmshape{r} |
-\def\rmbshape{bx} %where the normal face is bold |
-\def\bfshape{b} |
-\def\bxshape{bx} |
-\def\ttshape{tt} |
-\def\ttbshape{tt} |
-\def\ttslshape{sltt} |
-\def\itshape{ti} |
-\def\itbshape{bxti} |
-\def\slshape{sl} |
-\def\slbshape{bxsl} |
-\def\sfshape{ss} |
-\def\sfbshape{ss} |
-\def\scshape{csc} |
-\def\scbshape{csc} |
- |
-% Definitions for a main text size of 11pt. This is the default in |
-% Texinfo. |
-% |
-\def\definetextfontsizexi{% |
-% Text fonts (11.2pt, magstep1). |
-\def\textnominalsize{11pt} |
-\edef\mainmagstep{\magstephalf} |
-\setfont\textrm\rmshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1} |
-\setfont\texttt\ttshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\textbf\bfshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1} |
-\setfont\textit\itshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\textsl\slshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1} |
-\setfont\textsf\sfshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1} |
-\setfont\textsc\scshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1} |
-\setfont\textttsl\ttslshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1TT} |
-\font\texti=cmmi10 scaled \mainmagstep |
-\font\textsy=cmsy10 scaled \mainmagstep |
-\def\textecsize{1095} |
- |
-% A few fonts for @defun names and args. |
-\setfont\defbf\bfshape{10}{\magstep1}{OT1} |
-\setfont\deftt\ttshape{10}{\magstep1}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\defttsl\ttslshape{10}{\magstep1}{OT1TT} |
-\def\df{\let\tentt=\deftt \let\tenbf = \defbf \let\tenttsl=\defttsl \bf} |
- |
-% Fonts for indices, footnotes, small examples (9pt). |
-\def\smallnominalsize{9pt} |
-\setfont\smallrm\rmshape{9}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smalltt\ttshape{9}{1000}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\smallbf\bfshape{10}{900}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallit\itshape{9}{1000}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\smallsl\slshape{9}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallsf\sfshape{9}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallsc\scshape{10}{900}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallttsl\ttslshape{10}{900}{OT1TT} |
-\font\smalli=cmmi9 |
-\font\smallsy=cmsy9 |
-\def\smallecsize{0900} |
- |
-% Fonts for small examples (8pt). |
-\def\smallernominalsize{8pt} |
-\setfont\smallerrm\rmshape{8}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallertt\ttshape{8}{1000}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\smallerbf\bfshape{10}{800}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallerit\itshape{8}{1000}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\smallersl\slshape{8}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallersf\sfshape{8}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallersc\scshape{10}{800}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallerttsl\ttslshape{10}{800}{OT1TT} |
-\font\smalleri=cmmi8 |
-\font\smallersy=cmsy8 |
-\def\smallerecsize{0800} |
- |
-% Fonts for title page (20.4pt): |
-\def\titlenominalsize{20pt} |
-\setfont\titlerm\rmbshape{12}{\magstep3}{OT1} |
-\setfont\titleit\itbshape{10}{\magstep4}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\titlesl\slbshape{10}{\magstep4}{OT1} |
-\setfont\titlett\ttbshape{12}{\magstep3}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\titlettsl\ttslshape{10}{\magstep4}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\titlesf\sfbshape{17}{\magstep1}{OT1} |
-\let\titlebf=\titlerm |
-\setfont\titlesc\scbshape{10}{\magstep4}{OT1} |
-\font\titlei=cmmi12 scaled \magstep3 |
-\font\titlesy=cmsy10 scaled \magstep4 |
-\def\authorrm{\secrm} |
-\def\authortt{\sectt} |
-\def\titleecsize{2074} |
- |
-% Chapter (and unnumbered) fonts (17.28pt). |
-\def\chapnominalsize{17pt} |
-\setfont\chaprm\rmbshape{12}{\magstep2}{OT1} |
-\setfont\chapit\itbshape{10}{\magstep3}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\chapsl\slbshape{10}{\magstep3}{OT1} |
-\setfont\chaptt\ttbshape{12}{\magstep2}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\chapttsl\ttslshape{10}{\magstep3}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\chapsf\sfbshape{17}{1000}{OT1} |
-\let\chapbf=\chaprm |
-\setfont\chapsc\scbshape{10}{\magstep3}{OT1} |
-\font\chapi=cmmi12 scaled \magstep2 |
-\font\chapsy=cmsy10 scaled \magstep3 |
-\def\chapecsize{1728} |
- |
-% Section fonts (14.4pt). |
-\def\secnominalsize{14pt} |
-\setfont\secrm\rmbshape{12}{\magstep1}{OT1} |
-\setfont\secit\itbshape{10}{\magstep2}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\secsl\slbshape{10}{\magstep2}{OT1} |
-\setfont\sectt\ttbshape{12}{\magstep1}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\secttsl\ttslshape{10}{\magstep2}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\secsf\sfbshape{12}{\magstep1}{OT1} |
-\let\secbf\secrm |
-\setfont\secsc\scbshape{10}{\magstep2}{OT1} |
-\font\seci=cmmi12 scaled \magstep1 |
-\font\secsy=cmsy10 scaled \magstep2 |
-\def\sececsize{1440} |
- |
-% Subsection fonts (13.15pt). |
-\def\ssecnominalsize{13pt} |
-\setfont\ssecrm\rmbshape{12}{\magstephalf}{OT1} |
-\setfont\ssecit\itbshape{10}{1315}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\ssecsl\slbshape{10}{1315}{OT1} |
-\setfont\ssectt\ttbshape{12}{\magstephalf}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\ssecttsl\ttslshape{10}{1315}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\ssecsf\sfbshape{12}{\magstephalf}{OT1} |
-\let\ssecbf\ssecrm |
-\setfont\ssecsc\scbshape{10}{1315}{OT1} |
-\font\sseci=cmmi12 scaled \magstephalf |
-\font\ssecsy=cmsy10 scaled 1315 |
-\def\ssececsize{1200} |
- |
-% Reduced fonts for @acro in text (10pt). |
-\def\reducednominalsize{10pt} |
-\setfont\reducedrm\rmshape{10}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\reducedtt\ttshape{10}{1000}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\reducedbf\bfshape{10}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\reducedit\itshape{10}{1000}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\reducedsl\slshape{10}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\reducedsf\sfshape{10}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\reducedsc\scshape{10}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\reducedttsl\ttslshape{10}{1000}{OT1TT} |
-\font\reducedi=cmmi10 |
-\font\reducedsy=cmsy10 |
-\def\reducedecsize{1000} |
- |
-% reset the current fonts |
-\textfonts |
-\rm |
-} % end of 11pt text font size definitions |
- |
- |
-% Definitions to make the main text be 10pt Computer Modern, with |
-% section, chapter, etc., sizes following suit. This is for the GNU |
-% Press printing of the Emacs 22 manual. Maybe other manuals in the |
-% future. Used with @smallbook, which sets the leading to 12pt. |
-% |
-\def\definetextfontsizex{% |
-% Text fonts (10pt). |
-\def\textnominalsize{10pt} |
-\edef\mainmagstep{1000} |
-\setfont\textrm\rmshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1} |
-\setfont\texttt\ttshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\textbf\bfshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1} |
-\setfont\textit\itshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\textsl\slshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1} |
-\setfont\textsf\sfshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1} |
-\setfont\textsc\scshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1} |
-\setfont\textttsl\ttslshape{10}{\mainmagstep}{OT1TT} |
-\font\texti=cmmi10 scaled \mainmagstep |
-\font\textsy=cmsy10 scaled \mainmagstep |
-\def\textecsize{1000} |
- |
-% A few fonts for @defun names and args. |
-\setfont\defbf\bfshape{10}{\magstephalf}{OT1} |
-\setfont\deftt\ttshape{10}{\magstephalf}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\defttsl\ttslshape{10}{\magstephalf}{OT1TT} |
-\def\df{\let\tentt=\deftt \let\tenbf = \defbf \let\tenttsl=\defttsl \bf} |
- |
-% Fonts for indices, footnotes, small examples (9pt). |
-\def\smallnominalsize{9pt} |
-\setfont\smallrm\rmshape{9}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smalltt\ttshape{9}{1000}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\smallbf\bfshape{10}{900}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallit\itshape{9}{1000}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\smallsl\slshape{9}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallsf\sfshape{9}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallsc\scshape{10}{900}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallttsl\ttslshape{10}{900}{OT1TT} |
-\font\smalli=cmmi9 |
-\font\smallsy=cmsy9 |
-\def\smallecsize{0900} |
- |
-% Fonts for small examples (8pt). |
-\def\smallernominalsize{8pt} |
-\setfont\smallerrm\rmshape{8}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallertt\ttshape{8}{1000}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\smallerbf\bfshape{10}{800}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallerit\itshape{8}{1000}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\smallersl\slshape{8}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallersf\sfshape{8}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallersc\scshape{10}{800}{OT1} |
-\setfont\smallerttsl\ttslshape{10}{800}{OT1TT} |
-\font\smalleri=cmmi8 |
-\font\smallersy=cmsy8 |
-\def\smallerecsize{0800} |
- |
-% Fonts for title page (20.4pt): |
-\def\titlenominalsize{20pt} |
-\setfont\titlerm\rmbshape{12}{\magstep3}{OT1} |
-\setfont\titleit\itbshape{10}{\magstep4}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\titlesl\slbshape{10}{\magstep4}{OT1} |
-\setfont\titlett\ttbshape{12}{\magstep3}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\titlettsl\ttslshape{10}{\magstep4}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\titlesf\sfbshape{17}{\magstep1}{OT1} |
-\let\titlebf=\titlerm |
-\setfont\titlesc\scbshape{10}{\magstep4}{OT1} |
-\font\titlei=cmmi12 scaled \magstep3 |
-\font\titlesy=cmsy10 scaled \magstep4 |
-\def\authorrm{\secrm} |
-\def\authortt{\sectt} |
-\def\titleecsize{2074} |
- |
-% Chapter fonts (14.4pt). |
-\def\chapnominalsize{14pt} |
-\setfont\chaprm\rmbshape{12}{\magstep1}{OT1} |
-\setfont\chapit\itbshape{10}{\magstep2}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\chapsl\slbshape{10}{\magstep2}{OT1} |
-\setfont\chaptt\ttbshape{12}{\magstep1}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\chapttsl\ttslshape{10}{\magstep2}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\chapsf\sfbshape{12}{\magstep1}{OT1} |
-\let\chapbf\chaprm |
-\setfont\chapsc\scbshape{10}{\magstep2}{OT1} |
-\font\chapi=cmmi12 scaled \magstep1 |
-\font\chapsy=cmsy10 scaled \magstep2 |
-\def\chapecsize{1440} |
- |
-% Section fonts (12pt). |
-\def\secnominalsize{12pt} |
-\setfont\secrm\rmbshape{12}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\secit\itbshape{10}{\magstep1}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\secsl\slbshape{10}{\magstep1}{OT1} |
-\setfont\sectt\ttbshape{12}{1000}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\secttsl\ttslshape{10}{\magstep1}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\secsf\sfbshape{12}{1000}{OT1} |
-\let\secbf\secrm |
-\setfont\secsc\scbshape{10}{\magstep1}{OT1} |
-\font\seci=cmmi12 |
-\font\secsy=cmsy10 scaled \magstep1 |
-\def\sececsize{1200} |
- |
-% Subsection fonts (10pt). |
-\def\ssecnominalsize{10pt} |
-\setfont\ssecrm\rmbshape{10}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\ssecit\itbshape{10}{1000}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\ssecsl\slbshape{10}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\ssectt\ttbshape{10}{1000}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\ssecttsl\ttslshape{10}{1000}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\ssecsf\sfbshape{10}{1000}{OT1} |
-\let\ssecbf\ssecrm |
-\setfont\ssecsc\scbshape{10}{1000}{OT1} |
-\font\sseci=cmmi10 |
-\font\ssecsy=cmsy10 |
-\def\ssececsize{1000} |
- |
-% Reduced fonts for @acro in text (9pt). |
-\def\reducednominalsize{9pt} |
-\setfont\reducedrm\rmshape{9}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\reducedtt\ttshape{9}{1000}{OT1TT} |
-\setfont\reducedbf\bfshape{10}{900}{OT1} |
-\setfont\reducedit\itshape{9}{1000}{OT1IT} |
-\setfont\reducedsl\slshape{9}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\reducedsf\sfshape{9}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\reducedsc\scshape{10}{900}{OT1} |
-\setfont\reducedttsl\ttslshape{10}{900}{OT1TT} |
-\font\reducedi=cmmi9 |
-\font\reducedsy=cmsy9 |
-\def\reducedecsize{0900} |
- |
-% reduce space between paragraphs |
-\divide\parskip by 2 |
- |
-% reset the current fonts |
-\textfonts |
-\rm |
-} % end of 10pt text font size definitions |
- |
- |
-% We provide the user-level command |
-% @fonttextsize 10 |
-% (or 11) to redefine the text font size. pt is assumed. |
-% |
-\def\xword{10} |
-\def\xiword{11} |
-% |
-\parseargdef\fonttextsize{% |
- \def\textsizearg{#1}% |
- \wlog{doing @fonttextsize \textsizearg}% |
- % |
- % Set \globaldefs so that documents can use this inside @tex, since |
- % makeinfo 4.8 does not support it, but we need it nonetheless. |
- % |
- \begingroup \globaldefs=1 |
- \ifx\textsizearg\xword \definetextfontsizex |
- \else \ifx\textsizearg\xiword \definetextfontsizexi |
- \else |
- \errhelp=\EMsimple |
- \errmessage{@fonttextsize only supports `10' or `11', not `\textsizearg'} |
- \fi\fi |
- \endgroup |
-} |
- |
- |
-% In order for the font changes to affect most math symbols and letters, |
-% we have to define the \textfont of the standard families. Since |
-% texinfo doesn't allow for producing subscripts and superscripts except |
-% in the main text, we don't bother to reset \scriptfont and |
-% \scriptscriptfont (which would also require loading a lot more fonts). |
-% |
-\def\resetmathfonts{% |
- \textfont0=\tenrm \textfont1=\teni \textfont2=\tensy |
- \textfont\itfam=\tenit \textfont\slfam=\tensl \textfont\bffam=\tenbf |
- \textfont\ttfam=\tentt \textfont\sffam=\tensf |
-} |
- |
-% The font-changing commands redefine the meanings of \tenSTYLE, instead |
-% of just \STYLE. We do this because \STYLE needs to also set the |
-% current \fam for math mode. Our \STYLE (e.g., \rm) commands hardwire |
-% \tenSTYLE to set the current font. |
-% |
-% Each font-changing command also sets the names \lsize (one size lower) |
-% and \lllsize (three sizes lower). These relative commands are used in |
-% the LaTeX logo and acronyms. |
-% |
-% This all needs generalizing, badly. |
-% |
-\def\textfonts{% |
- \let\tenrm=\textrm \let\tenit=\textit \let\tensl=\textsl |
- \let\tenbf=\textbf \let\tentt=\texttt \let\smallcaps=\textsc |
- \let\tensf=\textsf \let\teni=\texti \let\tensy=\textsy |
- \let\tenttsl=\textttsl |
- \def\curfontsize{text}% |
- \def\lsize{reduced}\def\lllsize{smaller}% |
- \resetmathfonts \setleading{\textleading}} |
-\def\titlefonts{% |
- \let\tenrm=\titlerm \let\tenit=\titleit \let\tensl=\titlesl |
- \let\tenbf=\titlebf \let\tentt=\titlett \let\smallcaps=\titlesc |
- \let\tensf=\titlesf \let\teni=\titlei \let\tensy=\titlesy |
- \let\tenttsl=\titlettsl |
- \def\curfontsize{title}% |
- \def\lsize{chap}\def\lllsize{subsec}% |
- \resetmathfonts \setleading{25pt}} |
-\def\titlefont#1{{\titlefonts\rm #1}} |
-\def\chapfonts{% |
- \let\tenrm=\chaprm \let\tenit=\chapit \let\tensl=\chapsl |
- \let\tenbf=\chapbf \let\tentt=\chaptt \let\smallcaps=\chapsc |
- \let\tensf=\chapsf \let\teni=\chapi \let\tensy=\chapsy |
- \let\tenttsl=\chapttsl |
- \def\curfontsize{chap}% |
- \def\lsize{sec}\def\lllsize{text}% |
- \resetmathfonts \setleading{19pt}} |
-\def\secfonts{% |
- \let\tenrm=\secrm \let\tenit=\secit \let\tensl=\secsl |
- \let\tenbf=\secbf \let\tentt=\sectt \let\smallcaps=\secsc |
- \let\tensf=\secsf \let\teni=\seci \let\tensy=\secsy |
- \let\tenttsl=\secttsl |
- \def\curfontsize{sec}% |
- \def\lsize{subsec}\def\lllsize{reduced}% |
- \resetmathfonts \setleading{16pt}} |
-\def\subsecfonts{% |
- \let\tenrm=\ssecrm \let\tenit=\ssecit \let\tensl=\ssecsl |
- \let\tenbf=\ssecbf \let\tentt=\ssectt \let\smallcaps=\ssecsc |
- \let\tensf=\ssecsf \let\teni=\sseci \let\tensy=\ssecsy |
- \let\tenttsl=\ssecttsl |
- \def\curfontsize{ssec}% |
- \def\lsize{text}\def\lllsize{small}% |
- \resetmathfonts \setleading{15pt}} |
-\let\subsubsecfonts = \subsecfonts |
-\def\reducedfonts{% |
- \let\tenrm=\reducedrm \let\tenit=\reducedit \let\tensl=\reducedsl |
- \let\tenbf=\reducedbf \let\tentt=\reducedtt \let\reducedcaps=\reducedsc |
- \let\tensf=\reducedsf \let\teni=\reducedi \let\tensy=\reducedsy |
- \let\tenttsl=\reducedttsl |
- \def\curfontsize{reduced}% |
- \def\lsize{small}\def\lllsize{smaller}% |
- \resetmathfonts \setleading{10.5pt}} |
-\def\smallfonts{% |
- \let\tenrm=\smallrm \let\tenit=\smallit \let\tensl=\smallsl |
- \let\tenbf=\smallbf \let\tentt=\smalltt \let\smallcaps=\smallsc |
- \let\tensf=\smallsf \let\teni=\smalli \let\tensy=\smallsy |
- \let\tenttsl=\smallttsl |
- \def\curfontsize{small}% |
- \def\lsize{smaller}\def\lllsize{smaller}% |
- \resetmathfonts \setleading{10.5pt}} |
-\def\smallerfonts{% |
- \let\tenrm=\smallerrm \let\tenit=\smallerit \let\tensl=\smallersl |
- \let\tenbf=\smallerbf \let\tentt=\smallertt \let\smallcaps=\smallersc |
- \let\tensf=\smallersf \let\teni=\smalleri \let\tensy=\smallersy |
- \let\tenttsl=\smallerttsl |
- \def\curfontsize{smaller}% |
- \def\lsize{smaller}\def\lllsize{smaller}% |
- \resetmathfonts \setleading{9.5pt}} |
- |
-% Set the fonts to use with the @small... environments. |
-\let\smallexamplefonts = \smallfonts |
- |
-% About \smallexamplefonts. If we use \smallfonts (9pt), @smallexample |
-% can fit this many characters: |
-% 8.5x11=86 smallbook=72 a4=90 a5=69 |
-% If we use \scriptfonts (8pt), then we can fit this many characters: |
-% 8.5x11=90+ smallbook=80 a4=90+ a5=77 |
-% For me, subjectively, the few extra characters that fit aren't worth |
-% the additional smallness of 8pt. So I'm making the default 9pt. |
-% |
-% By the way, for comparison, here's what fits with @example (10pt): |
-% 8.5x11=71 smallbook=60 a4=75 a5=58 |
-% |
-% I wish the USA used A4 paper. |
-% --karl, 24jan03. |
- |
- |
-% Set up the default fonts, so we can use them for creating boxes. |
-% |
-\definetextfontsizexi |
- |
-% Define these so they can be easily changed for other fonts. |
-\def\angleleft{$\langle$} |
-\def\angleright{$\rangle$} |
- |
-% Count depth in font-changes, for error checks |
-\newcount\fontdepth \fontdepth=0 |
- |
-% Fonts for short table of contents. |
-\setfont\shortcontrm\rmshape{12}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\shortcontbf\bfshape{10}{\magstep1}{OT1} % no cmb12 |
-\setfont\shortcontsl\slshape{12}{1000}{OT1} |
-\setfont\shortconttt\ttshape{12}{1000}{OT1TT} |
- |
-%% Add scribe-like font environments, plus @l for inline lisp (usually sans |
-%% serif) and @ii for TeX italic |
- |
-% \smartitalic{ARG} outputs arg in italics, followed by an italic correction |
-% unless the following character is such as not to need one. |
-\def\smartitalicx{\ifx\next,\else\ifx\next-\else\ifx\next.\else |
- \ptexslash\fi\fi\fi} |
-\def\smartslanted#1{{\ifusingtt\ttsl\sl #1}\futurelet\next\smartitalicx} |
-\def\smartitalic#1{{\ifusingtt\ttsl\it #1}\futurelet\next\smartitalicx} |
- |
-% like \smartslanted except unconditionally uses \ttsl. |
-% @var is set to this for defun arguments. |
-\def\ttslanted#1{{\ttsl #1}\futurelet\next\smartitalicx} |
- |
-% like \smartslanted except unconditionally use \sl. We never want |
-% ttsl for book titles, do we? |
-\def\cite#1{{\sl #1}\futurelet\next\smartitalicx} |
- |
-\let\i=\smartitalic |
-\let\slanted=\smartslanted |
-\let\var=\smartslanted |
-\let\dfn=\smartslanted |
-\let\emph=\smartitalic |
- |
-% @b, explicit bold. |
-\def\b#1{{\bf #1}} |
-\let\strong=\b |
- |
-% @sansserif, explicit sans. |
-\def\sansserif#1{{\sf #1}} |
- |
-% We can't just use \exhyphenpenalty, because that only has effect at |
-% the end of a paragraph. Restore normal hyphenation at the end of the |
-% group within which \nohyphenation is presumably called. |
-% |
-\def\nohyphenation{\hyphenchar\font = -1 \aftergroup\restorehyphenation} |
-\def\restorehyphenation{\hyphenchar\font = `- } |
- |
-% Set sfcode to normal for the chars that usually have another value. |
-% Can't use plain's \frenchspacing because it uses the `\x notation, and |
-% sometimes \x has an active definition that messes things up. |
-% |
-\catcode`@=11 |
- \def\plainfrenchspacing{% |
- \sfcode\dotChar =\@m \sfcode\questChar=\@m \sfcode\exclamChar=\@m |
- \sfcode\colonChar=\@m \sfcode\semiChar =\@m \sfcode\commaChar =\@m |
- \def\endofsentencespacefactor{1000}% for @. and friends |
- } |
- \def\plainnonfrenchspacing{% |
- \sfcode`\.3000\sfcode`\?3000\sfcode`\!3000 |
- \sfcode`\:2000\sfcode`\;1500\sfcode`\,1250 |
- \def\endofsentencespacefactor{3000}% for @. and friends |
- } |
-\catcode`@=\other |
-\def\endofsentencespacefactor{3000}% default |
- |
-\def\t#1{% |
- {\tt \rawbackslash \plainfrenchspacing #1}% |
- \null |
-} |
-\def\samp#1{`\tclose{#1}'\null} |
-\setfont\keyrm\rmshape{8}{1000}{OT1} |
-\font\keysy=cmsy9 |
-\def\key#1{{\keyrm\textfont2=\keysy \leavevmode\hbox{% |
- \raise0.4pt\hbox{\angleleft}\kern-.08em\vtop{% |
- \vbox{\hrule\kern-0.4pt |
- \hbox{\raise0.4pt\hbox{\vphantom{\angleleft}}#1}}% |
- \kern-0.4pt\hrule}% |
- \kern-.06em\raise0.4pt\hbox{\angleright}}}} |
-\def\key #1{{\nohyphenation \uppercase{#1}}\null} |
-% The old definition, with no lozenge: |
-%\def\key #1{{\ttsl \nohyphenation \uppercase{#1}}\null} |
-\def\ctrl #1{{\tt \rawbackslash \hat}#1} |
- |
-% @file, @option are the same as @samp. |
-\let\file=\samp |
-\let\option=\samp |
- |
-% @code is a modification of @t, |
-% which makes spaces the same size as normal in the surrounding text. |
-\def\tclose#1{% |
- {% |
- % Change normal interword space to be same as for the current font. |
- \spaceskip = \fontdimen2\font |
- % |
- % Switch to typewriter. |
- \tt |
- % |
- % But `\ ' produces the large typewriter interword space. |
- \def\ {{\spaceskip = 0pt{} }}% |
- % |
- % Turn off hyphenation. |
- \nohyphenation |
- % |
- \rawbackslash |
- \plainfrenchspacing |
- #1% |
- }% |
- \null |
-} |
- |
-% We *must* turn on hyphenation at `-' and `_' in @code. |
-% Otherwise, it is too hard to avoid overfull hboxes |
-% in the Emacs manual, the Library manual, etc. |
- |
-% Unfortunately, TeX uses one parameter (\hyphenchar) to control |
-% both hyphenation at - and hyphenation within words. |
-% We must therefore turn them both off (\tclose does that) |
-% and arrange explicitly to hyphenate at a dash. |
-% -- rms. |
-{ |
- \catcode`\-=\active \catcode`\_=\active |
- \catcode`\'=\active \catcode`\`=\active |
- % |
- \global\def\code{\begingroup |
- \catcode\rquoteChar=\active \catcode\lquoteChar=\active |
- \let'\codequoteright \let`\codequoteleft |
- % |
- \catcode\dashChar=\active \catcode\underChar=\active |
- \ifallowcodebreaks |
- \let-\codedash |
- \let_\codeunder |
- \else |
- \let-\realdash |
- \let_\realunder |
- \fi |
- \codex |
- } |
-} |
- |
-\def\realdash{-} |
-\def\codedash{-\discretionary{}{}{}} |
-\def\codeunder{% |
- % this is all so @math{@code{var_name}+1} can work. In math mode, _ |
- % is "active" (mathcode"8000) and \normalunderscore (or \char95, etc.) |
- % will therefore expand the active definition of _, which is us |
- % (inside @code that is), therefore an endless loop. |
- \ifusingtt{\ifmmode |
- \mathchar"075F % class 0=ordinary, family 7=ttfam, pos 0x5F=_. |
- \else\normalunderscore \fi |
- \discretionary{}{}{}}% |
- {\_}% |
-} |
-\def\codex #1{\tclose{#1}\endgroup} |
- |
-% An additional complication: the above will allow breaks after, e.g., |
-% each of the four underscores in __typeof__. This is undesirable in |
-% some manuals, especially if they don't have long identifiers in |
-% general. @allowcodebreaks provides a way to control this. |
-% |
-\newif\ifallowcodebreaks \allowcodebreakstrue |
- |
-\def\keywordtrue{true} |
-\def\keywordfalse{false} |
- |
-\parseargdef\allowcodebreaks{% |
- \def\txiarg{#1}% |
- \ifx\txiarg\keywordtrue |
- \allowcodebreakstrue |
- \else\ifx\txiarg\keywordfalse |
- \allowcodebreaksfalse |
- \else |
- \errhelp = \EMsimple |
- \errmessage{Unknown @allowcodebreaks option `\txiarg'}% |
- \fi\fi |
-} |
- |
-% @kbd is like @code, except that if the argument is just one @key command, |
-% then @kbd has no effect. |
- |
-% @kbdinputstyle -- arg is `distinct' (@kbd uses slanted tty font always), |
-% `example' (@kbd uses ttsl only inside of @example and friends), |
-% or `code' (@kbd uses normal tty font always). |
-\parseargdef\kbdinputstyle{% |
- \def\txiarg{#1}% |
- \ifx\txiarg\worddistinct |
- \gdef\kbdexamplefont{\ttsl}\gdef\kbdfont{\ttsl}% |
- \else\ifx\txiarg\wordexample |
- \gdef\kbdexamplefont{\ttsl}\gdef\kbdfont{\tt}% |
- \else\ifx\txiarg\wordcode |
- \gdef\kbdexamplefont{\tt}\gdef\kbdfont{\tt}% |
- \else |
- \errhelp = \EMsimple |
- \errmessage{Unknown @kbdinputstyle option `\txiarg'}% |
- \fi\fi\fi |
-} |
-\def\worddistinct{distinct} |
-\def\wordexample{example} |
-\def\wordcode{code} |
- |
-% Default is `distinct.' |
-\kbdinputstyle distinct |
- |
-\def\xkey{\key} |
-\def\kbdfoo#1#2#3\par{\def\one{#1}\def\three{#3}\def\threex{??}% |
-\ifx\one\xkey\ifx\threex\three \key{#2}% |
-\else{\tclose{\kbdfont\look}}\fi |
-\else{\tclose{\kbdfont\look}}\fi} |
- |
-% For @indicateurl, @env, @command quotes seem unnecessary, so use \code. |
-\let\indicateurl=\code |
-\let\env=\code |
-\let\command=\code |
- |
-% @clicksequence{File @click{} Open ...} |
-\def\clicksequence#1{\begingroup #1\endgroup} |
- |
-% @clickstyle @arrow (by default) |
-\parseargdef\clickstyle{\def\click{#1}} |
-\def\click{\arrow} |
- |
-% @uref (abbreviation for `urlref') takes an optional (comma-separated) |
-% second argument specifying the text to display and an optional third |
-% arg as text to display instead of (rather than in addition to) the url |
-% itself. First (mandatory) arg is the url. Perhaps eventually put in |
-% a hypertex \special here. |
-% |
-\def\uref#1{\douref #1,,,\finish} |
-\def\douref#1,#2,#3,#4\finish{\begingroup |
- \unsepspaces |
- \pdfurl{#1}% |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #3}% |
- \ifdim\wd0 > 0pt |
- \unhbox0 % third arg given, show only that |
- \else |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #2}% |
- \ifdim\wd0 > 0pt |
- \ifpdf |
- \unhbox0 % PDF: 2nd arg given, show only it |
- \else |
- \unhbox0\ (\code{#1})% DVI: 2nd arg given, show both it and url |
- \fi |
- \else |
- \code{#1}% only url given, so show it |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \endlink |
-\endgroup} |
- |
-% @url synonym for @uref, since that's how everyone uses it. |
-% |
-\let\url=\uref |
- |
-% rms does not like angle brackets --karl, 17may97. |
-% So now @email is just like @uref, unless we are pdf. |
-% |
-%\def\email#1{\angleleft{\tt #1}\angleright} |
-\ifpdf |
- \def\email#1{\doemail#1,,\finish} |
- \def\doemail#1,#2,#3\finish{\begingroup |
- \unsepspaces |
- \pdfurl{mailto:#1}% |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #2}% |
- \ifdim\wd0>0pt\unhbox0\else\code{#1}\fi |
- \endlink |
- \endgroup} |
-\else |
- \let\email=\uref |
-\fi |
- |
-% Check if we are currently using a typewriter font. Since all the |
-% Computer Modern typewriter fonts have zero interword stretch (and |
-% shrink), and it is reasonable to expect all typewriter fonts to have |
-% this property, we can check that font parameter. |
-% |
-\def\ifmonospace{\ifdim\fontdimen3\font=0pt } |
- |
-% Typeset a dimension, e.g., `in' or `pt'. The only reason for the |
-% argument is to make the input look right: @dmn{pt} instead of @dmn{}pt. |
-% |
-\def\dmn#1{\thinspace #1} |
- |
-\def\kbd#1{\def\look{#1}\expandafter\kbdfoo\look??\par} |
- |
-% @l was never documented to mean ``switch to the Lisp font'', |
-% and it is not used as such in any manual I can find. We need it for |
-% Polish suppressed-l. --karl, 22sep96. |
-%\def\l#1{{\li #1}\null} |
- |
-% Explicit font changes: @r, @sc, undocumented @ii. |
-\def\r#1{{\rm #1}} % roman font |
-\def\sc#1{{\smallcaps#1}} % smallcaps font |
-\def\ii#1{{\it #1}} % italic font |
- |
-% @acronym for "FBI", "NATO", and the like. |
-% We print this one point size smaller, since it's intended for |
-% all-uppercase. |
-% |
-\def\acronym#1{\doacronym #1,,\finish} |
-\def\doacronym#1,#2,#3\finish{% |
- {\selectfonts\lsize #1}% |
- \def\temp{#2}% |
- \ifx\temp\empty \else |
- \space ({\unsepspaces \ignorespaces \temp \unskip})% |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% @abbr for "Comput. J." and the like. |
-% No font change, but don't do end-of-sentence spacing. |
-% |
-\def\abbr#1{\doabbr #1,,\finish} |
-\def\doabbr#1,#2,#3\finish{% |
- {\plainfrenchspacing #1}% |
- \def\temp{#2}% |
- \ifx\temp\empty \else |
- \space ({\unsepspaces \ignorespaces \temp \unskip})% |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% @pounds{} is a sterling sign, which Knuth put in the CM italic font. |
-% |
-\def\pounds{{\it\$}} |
- |
-% @euro{} comes from a separate font, depending on the current style. |
-% We use the free feym* fonts from the eurosym package by Henrik |
-% Theiling, which support regular, slanted, bold and bold slanted (and |
-% "outlined" (blackboard board, sort of) versions, which we don't need). |
-% It is available from http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/fonts/eurosym. |
-% |
-% Although only regular is the truly official Euro symbol, we ignore |
-% that. The Euro is designed to be slightly taller than the regular |
-% font height. |
-% |
-% feymr - regular |
-% feymo - slanted |
-% feybr - bold |
-% feybo - bold slanted |
-% |
-% There is no good (free) typewriter version, to my knowledge. |
-% A feymr10 euro is ~7.3pt wide, while a normal cmtt10 char is ~5.25pt wide. |
-% Hmm. |
-% |
-% Also doesn't work in math. Do we need to do math with euro symbols? |
-% Hope not. |
-% |
-% |
-\def\euro{{\eurofont e}} |
-\def\eurofont{% |
- % We set the font at each command, rather than predefining it in |
- % \textfonts and the other font-switching commands, so that |
- % installations which never need the symbol don't have to have the |
- % font installed. |
- % |
- % There is only one designed size (nominal 10pt), so we always scale |
- % that to the current nominal size. |
- % |
- % By the way, simply using "at 1em" works for cmr10 and the like, but |
- % does not work for cmbx10 and other extended/shrunken fonts. |
- % |
- \def\eurosize{\csname\curfontsize nominalsize\endcsname}% |
- % |
- \ifx\curfontstyle\bfstylename |
- % bold: |
- \font\thiseurofont = \ifusingit{feybo10}{feybr10} at \eurosize |
- \else |
- % regular: |
- \font\thiseurofont = \ifusingit{feymo10}{feymr10} at \eurosize |
- \fi |
- \thiseurofont |
-} |
- |
-% Hacks for glyphs from the EC fonts similar to \euro. We don't |
-% use \let for the aliases, because sometimes we redefine the original |
-% macro, and the alias should reflect the redefinition. |
-\def\guillemetleft{{\ecfont \char"13}} |
-\def\guillemotleft{\guillemetleft} |
-\def\guillemetright{{\ecfont \char"14}} |
-\def\guillemotright{\guillemetright} |
-\def\guilsinglleft{{\ecfont \char"0E}} |
-\def\guilsinglright{{\ecfont \char"0F}} |
-\def\quotedblbase{{\ecfont \char"12}} |
-\def\quotesinglbase{{\ecfont \char"0D}} |
-% |
-\def\ecfont{% |
- % We can't distinguish serif/sanserif and italic/slanted, but this |
- % is used for crude hacks anyway (like adding French and German |
- % quotes to documents typeset with CM, where we lose kerning), so |
- % hopefully nobody will notice/care. |
- \edef\ecsize{\csname\curfontsize ecsize\endcsname}% |
- \edef\nominalsize{\csname\curfontsize nominalsize\endcsname}% |
- \ifx\curfontstyle\bfstylename |
- % bold: |
- \font\thisecfont = ecb\ifusingit{i}{x}\ecsize \space at \nominalsize |
- \else |
- % regular: |
- \font\thisecfont = ec\ifusingit{ti}{rm}\ecsize \space at \nominalsize |
- \fi |
- \thisecfont |
-} |
- |
-% @registeredsymbol - R in a circle. The font for the R should really |
-% be smaller yet, but lllsize is the best we can do for now. |
-% Adapted from the plain.tex definition of \copyright. |
-% |
-\def\registeredsymbol{% |
- $^{{\ooalign{\hfil\raise.07ex\hbox{\selectfonts\lllsize R}% |
- \hfil\crcr\Orb}}% |
- }$% |
-} |
- |
-% @textdegree - the normal degrees sign. |
-% |
-\def\textdegree{$^\circ$} |
- |
-% Laurent Siebenmann reports \Orb undefined with: |
-% Textures 1.7.7 (preloaded format=plain 93.10.14) (68K) 16 APR 2004 02:38 |
-% so we'll define it if necessary. |
-% |
-\ifx\Orb\undefined |
-\def\Orb{\mathhexbox20D} |
-\fi |
- |
-% Quotes. |
-\chardef\quotedblleft="5C |
-\chardef\quotedblright=`\" |
-\chardef\quoteleft=`\` |
-\chardef\quoteright=`\' |
- |
- |
-\message{page headings,} |
- |
-\newskip\titlepagetopglue \titlepagetopglue = 1.5in |
-\newskip\titlepagebottomglue \titlepagebottomglue = 2pc |
- |
-% First the title page. Must do @settitle before @titlepage. |
-\newif\ifseenauthor |
-\newif\iffinishedtitlepage |
- |
-% Do an implicit @contents or @shortcontents after @end titlepage if the |
-% user says @setcontentsaftertitlepage or @setshortcontentsaftertitlepage. |
-% |
-\newif\ifsetcontentsaftertitlepage |
- \let\setcontentsaftertitlepage = \setcontentsaftertitlepagetrue |
-\newif\ifsetshortcontentsaftertitlepage |
- \let\setshortcontentsaftertitlepage = \setshortcontentsaftertitlepagetrue |
- |
-\parseargdef\shorttitlepage{\begingroup\hbox{}\vskip 1.5in \chaprm \centerline{#1}% |
- \endgroup\page\hbox{}\page} |
- |
-\envdef\titlepage{% |
- % Open one extra group, as we want to close it in the middle of \Etitlepage. |
- \begingroup |
- \parindent=0pt \textfonts |
- % Leave some space at the very top of the page. |
- \vglue\titlepagetopglue |
- % No rule at page bottom unless we print one at the top with @title. |
- \finishedtitlepagetrue |
- % |
- % Most title ``pages'' are actually two pages long, with space |
- % at the top of the second. We don't want the ragged left on the second. |
- \let\oldpage = \page |
- \def\page{% |
- \iffinishedtitlepage\else |
- \finishtitlepage |
- \fi |
- \let\page = \oldpage |
- \page |
- \null |
- }% |
-} |
- |
-\def\Etitlepage{% |
- \iffinishedtitlepage\else |
- \finishtitlepage |
- \fi |
- % It is important to do the page break before ending the group, |
- % because the headline and footline are only empty inside the group. |
- % If we use the new definition of \page, we always get a blank page |
- % after the title page, which we certainly don't want. |
- \oldpage |
- \endgroup |
- % |
- % Need this before the \...aftertitlepage checks so that if they are |
- % in effect the toc pages will come out with page numbers. |
- \HEADINGSon |
- % |
- % If they want short, they certainly want long too. |
- \ifsetshortcontentsaftertitlepage |
- \shortcontents |
- \contents |
- \global\let\shortcontents = \relax |
- \global\let\contents = \relax |
- \fi |
- % |
- \ifsetcontentsaftertitlepage |
- \contents |
- \global\let\contents = \relax |
- \global\let\shortcontents = \relax |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-\def\finishtitlepage{% |
- \vskip4pt \hrule height 2pt width \hsize |
- \vskip\titlepagebottomglue |
- \finishedtitlepagetrue |
-} |
- |
-%%% Macros to be used within @titlepage: |
- |
-\let\subtitlerm=\tenrm |
-\def\subtitlefont{\subtitlerm \normalbaselineskip = 13pt \normalbaselines} |
- |
-\def\authorfont{\authorrm \normalbaselineskip = 16pt \normalbaselines |
- \let\tt=\authortt} |
- |
-\parseargdef\title{% |
- \checkenv\titlepage |
- \leftline{\titlefonts\rm #1} |
- % print a rule at the page bottom also. |
- \finishedtitlepagefalse |
- \vskip4pt \hrule height 4pt width \hsize \vskip4pt |
-} |
- |
-\parseargdef\subtitle{% |
- \checkenv\titlepage |
- {\subtitlefont \rightline{#1}}% |
-} |
- |
-% @author should come last, but may come many times. |
-% It can also be used inside @quotation. |
-% |
-\parseargdef\author{% |
- \def\temp{\quotation}% |
- \ifx\thisenv\temp |
- \def\quotationauthor{#1}% printed in \Equotation. |
- \else |
- \checkenv\titlepage |
- \ifseenauthor\else \vskip 0pt plus 1filll \seenauthortrue \fi |
- {\authorfont \leftline{#1}}% |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
- |
-%%% Set up page headings and footings. |
- |
-\let\thispage=\folio |
- |
-\newtoks\evenheadline % headline on even pages |
-\newtoks\oddheadline % headline on odd pages |
-\newtoks\evenfootline % footline on even pages |
-\newtoks\oddfootline % footline on odd pages |
- |
-% Now make TeX use those variables |
-\headline={{\textfonts\rm \ifodd\pageno \the\oddheadline |
- \else \the\evenheadline \fi}} |
-\footline={{\textfonts\rm \ifodd\pageno \the\oddfootline |
- \else \the\evenfootline \fi}\HEADINGShook} |
-\let\HEADINGShook=\relax |
- |
-% Commands to set those variables. |
-% For example, this is what @headings on does |
-% @evenheading @thistitle|@thispage|@thischapter |
-% @oddheading @thischapter|@thispage|@thistitle |
-% @evenfooting @thisfile|| |
-% @oddfooting ||@thisfile |
- |
- |
-\def\evenheading{\parsearg\evenheadingxxx} |
-\def\evenheadingxxx #1{\evenheadingyyy #1\|\|\|\|\finish} |
-\def\evenheadingyyy #1\|#2\|#3\|#4\finish{% |
-\global\evenheadline={\rlap{\centerline{#2}}\line{#1\hfil#3}}} |
- |
-\def\oddheading{\parsearg\oddheadingxxx} |
-\def\oddheadingxxx #1{\oddheadingyyy #1\|\|\|\|\finish} |
-\def\oddheadingyyy #1\|#2\|#3\|#4\finish{% |
-\global\oddheadline={\rlap{\centerline{#2}}\line{#1\hfil#3}}} |
- |
-\parseargdef\everyheading{\oddheadingxxx{#1}\evenheadingxxx{#1}}% |
- |
-\def\evenfooting{\parsearg\evenfootingxxx} |
-\def\evenfootingxxx #1{\evenfootingyyy #1\|\|\|\|\finish} |
-\def\evenfootingyyy #1\|#2\|#3\|#4\finish{% |
-\global\evenfootline={\rlap{\centerline{#2}}\line{#1\hfil#3}}} |
- |
-\def\oddfooting{\parsearg\oddfootingxxx} |
-\def\oddfootingxxx #1{\oddfootingyyy #1\|\|\|\|\finish} |
-\def\oddfootingyyy #1\|#2\|#3\|#4\finish{% |
- \global\oddfootline = {\rlap{\centerline{#2}}\line{#1\hfil#3}}% |
- % |
- % Leave some space for the footline. Hopefully ok to assume |
- % @evenfooting will not be used by itself. |
- \global\advance\pageheight by -12pt |
- \global\advance\vsize by -12pt |
-} |
- |
-\parseargdef\everyfooting{\oddfootingxxx{#1}\evenfootingxxx{#1}} |
- |
-% @evenheadingmarks top \thischapter <- chapter at the top of a page |
-% @evenheadingmarks bottom \thischapter <- chapter at the bottom of a page |
-% |
-% The same set of arguments for: |
-% |
-% @oddheadingmarks |
-% @evenfootingmarks |
-% @oddfootingmarks |
-% @everyheadingmarks |
-% @everyfootingmarks |
- |
-\def\evenheadingmarks{\headingmarks{even}{heading}} |
-\def\oddheadingmarks{\headingmarks{odd}{heading}} |
-\def\evenfootingmarks{\headingmarks{even}{footing}} |
-\def\oddfootingmarks{\headingmarks{odd}{footing}} |
-\def\everyheadingmarks#1 {\headingmarks{even}{heading}{#1} |
- \headingmarks{odd}{heading}{#1} } |
-\def\everyfootingmarks#1 {\headingmarks{even}{footing}{#1} |
- \headingmarks{odd}{footing}{#1} } |
-% #1 = even/odd, #2 = heading/footing, #3 = top/bottom. |
-\def\headingmarks#1#2#3 {% |
- \expandafter\let\expandafter\temp \csname get#3headingmarks\endcsname |
- \global\expandafter\let\csname get#1#2marks\endcsname \temp |
-} |
- |
-\everyheadingmarks bottom |
-\everyfootingmarks bottom |
- |
-% @headings double turns headings on for double-sided printing. |
-% @headings single turns headings on for single-sided printing. |
-% @headings off turns them off. |
-% @headings on same as @headings double, retained for compatibility. |
-% @headings after turns on double-sided headings after this page. |
-% @headings doubleafter turns on double-sided headings after this page. |
-% @headings singleafter turns on single-sided headings after this page. |
-% By default, they are off at the start of a document, |
-% and turned `on' after @end titlepage. |
- |
-\def\headings #1 {\csname HEADINGS#1\endcsname} |
- |
-\def\HEADINGSoff{% |
-\global\evenheadline={\hfil} \global\evenfootline={\hfil} |
-\global\oddheadline={\hfil} \global\oddfootline={\hfil}} |
-\HEADINGSoff |
-% When we turn headings on, set the page number to 1. |
-% For double-sided printing, put current file name in lower left corner, |
-% chapter name on inside top of right hand pages, document |
-% title on inside top of left hand pages, and page numbers on outside top |
-% edge of all pages. |
-\def\HEADINGSdouble{% |
-\global\pageno=1 |
-\global\evenfootline={\hfil} |
-\global\oddfootline={\hfil} |
-\global\evenheadline={\line{\folio\hfil\thistitle}} |
-\global\oddheadline={\line{\thischapter\hfil\folio}} |
-\global\let\contentsalignmacro = \chapoddpage |
-} |
-\let\contentsalignmacro = \chappager |
- |
-% For single-sided printing, chapter title goes across top left of page, |
-% page number on top right. |
-\def\HEADINGSsingle{% |
-\global\pageno=1 |
-\global\evenfootline={\hfil} |
-\global\oddfootline={\hfil} |
-\global\evenheadline={\line{\thischapter\hfil\folio}} |
-\global\oddheadline={\line{\thischapter\hfil\folio}} |
-\global\let\contentsalignmacro = \chappager |
-} |
-\def\HEADINGSon{\HEADINGSdouble} |
- |
-\def\HEADINGSafter{\let\HEADINGShook=\HEADINGSdoublex} |
-\let\HEADINGSdoubleafter=\HEADINGSafter |
-\def\HEADINGSdoublex{% |
-\global\evenfootline={\hfil} |
-\global\oddfootline={\hfil} |
-\global\evenheadline={\line{\folio\hfil\thistitle}} |
-\global\oddheadline={\line{\thischapter\hfil\folio}} |
-\global\let\contentsalignmacro = \chapoddpage |
-} |
- |
-\def\HEADINGSsingleafter{\let\HEADINGShook=\HEADINGSsinglex} |
-\def\HEADINGSsinglex{% |
-\global\evenfootline={\hfil} |
-\global\oddfootline={\hfil} |
-\global\evenheadline={\line{\thischapter\hfil\folio}} |
-\global\oddheadline={\line{\thischapter\hfil\folio}} |
-\global\let\contentsalignmacro = \chappager |
-} |
- |
-% Subroutines used in generating headings |
-% This produces Day Month Year style of output. |
-% Only define if not already defined, in case a txi-??.tex file has set |
-% up a different format (e.g., txi-cs.tex does this). |
-\ifx\today\undefined |
-\def\today{% |
- \number\day\space |
- \ifcase\month |
- \or\putwordMJan\or\putwordMFeb\or\putwordMMar\or\putwordMApr |
- \or\putwordMMay\or\putwordMJun\or\putwordMJul\or\putwordMAug |
- \or\putwordMSep\or\putwordMOct\or\putwordMNov\or\putwordMDec |
- \fi |
- \space\number\year} |
-\fi |
- |
-% @settitle line... specifies the title of the document, for headings. |
-% It generates no output of its own. |
-\def\thistitle{\putwordNoTitle} |
-\def\settitle{\parsearg{\gdef\thistitle}} |
- |
- |
-\message{tables,} |
-% Tables -- @table, @ftable, @vtable, @item(x). |
- |
-% default indentation of table text |
-\newdimen\tableindent \tableindent=.8in |
-% default indentation of @itemize and @enumerate text |
-\newdimen\itemindent \itemindent=.3in |
-% margin between end of table item and start of table text. |
-\newdimen\itemmargin \itemmargin=.1in |
- |
-% used internally for \itemindent minus \itemmargin |
-\newdimen\itemmax |
- |
-% Note @table, @ftable, and @vtable define @item, @itemx, etc., with |
-% these defs. |
-% They also define \itemindex |
-% to index the item name in whatever manner is desired (perhaps none). |
- |
-\newif\ifitemxneedsnegativevskip |
- |
-\def\itemxpar{\par\ifitemxneedsnegativevskip\nobreak\vskip-\parskip\nobreak\fi} |
- |
-\def\internalBitem{\smallbreak \parsearg\itemzzz} |
-\def\internalBitemx{\itemxpar \parsearg\itemzzz} |
- |
-\def\itemzzz #1{\begingroup % |
- \advance\hsize by -\rightskip |
- \advance\hsize by -\tableindent |
- \setbox0=\hbox{\itemindicate{#1}}% |
- \itemindex{#1}% |
- \nobreak % This prevents a break before @itemx. |
- % |
- % If the item text does not fit in the space we have, put it on a line |
- % by itself, and do not allow a page break either before or after that |
- % line. We do not start a paragraph here because then if the next |
- % command is, e.g., @kindex, the whatsit would get put into the |
- % horizontal list on a line by itself, resulting in extra blank space. |
- \ifdim \wd0>\itemmax |
- % |
- % Make this a paragraph so we get the \parskip glue and wrapping, |
- % but leave it ragged-right. |
- \begingroup |
- \advance\leftskip by-\tableindent |
- \advance\hsize by\tableindent |
- \advance\rightskip by0pt plus1fil |
- \leavevmode\unhbox0\par |
- \endgroup |
- % |
- % We're going to be starting a paragraph, but we don't want the |
- % \parskip glue -- logically it's part of the @item we just started. |
- \nobreak \vskip-\parskip |
- % |
- % Stop a page break at the \parskip glue coming up. However, if |
- % what follows is an environment such as @example, there will be no |
- % \parskip glue; then the negative vskip we just inserted would |
- % cause the example and the item to crash together. So we use this |
- % bizarre value of 10001 as a signal to \aboveenvbreak to insert |
- % \parskip glue after all. Section titles are handled this way also. |
- % |
- \penalty 10001 |
- \endgroup |
- \itemxneedsnegativevskipfalse |
- \else |
- % The item text fits into the space. Start a paragraph, so that the |
- % following text (if any) will end up on the same line. |
- \noindent |
- % Do this with kerns and \unhbox so that if there is a footnote in |
- % the item text, it can migrate to the main vertical list and |
- % eventually be printed. |
- \nobreak\kern-\tableindent |
- \dimen0 = \itemmax \advance\dimen0 by \itemmargin \advance\dimen0 by -\wd0 |
- \unhbox0 |
- \nobreak\kern\dimen0 |
- \endgroup |
- \itemxneedsnegativevskiptrue |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-\def\item{\errmessage{@item while not in a list environment}} |
-\def\itemx{\errmessage{@itemx while not in a list environment}} |
- |
-% @table, @ftable, @vtable. |
-\envdef\table{% |
- \let\itemindex\gobble |
- \tablecheck{table}% |
-} |
-\envdef\ftable{% |
- \def\itemindex ##1{\doind {fn}{\code{##1}}}% |
- \tablecheck{ftable}% |
-} |
-\envdef\vtable{% |
- \def\itemindex ##1{\doind {vr}{\code{##1}}}% |
- \tablecheck{vtable}% |
-} |
-\def\tablecheck#1{% |
- \ifnum \the\catcode`\^^M=\active |
- \endgroup |
- \errmessage{This command won't work in this context; perhaps the problem is |
- that we are \inenvironment\thisenv}% |
- \def\next{\doignore{#1}}% |
- \else |
- \let\next\tablex |
- \fi |
- \next |
-} |
-\def\tablex#1{% |
- \def\itemindicate{#1}% |
- \parsearg\tabley |
-} |
-\def\tabley#1{% |
- {% |
- \makevalueexpandable |
- \edef\temp{\noexpand\tablez #1\space\space\space}% |
- \expandafter |
- }\temp \endtablez |
-} |
-\def\tablez #1 #2 #3 #4\endtablez{% |
- \aboveenvbreak |
- \ifnum 0#1>0 \advance \leftskip by #1\mil \fi |
- \ifnum 0#2>0 \tableindent=#2\mil \fi |
- \ifnum 0#3>0 \advance \rightskip by #3\mil \fi |
- \itemmax=\tableindent |
- \advance \itemmax by -\itemmargin |
- \advance \leftskip by \tableindent |
- \exdentamount=\tableindent |
- \parindent = 0pt |
- \parskip = \smallskipamount |
- \ifdim \parskip=0pt \parskip=2pt \fi |
- \let\item = \internalBitem |
- \let\itemx = \internalBitemx |
-} |
-\def\Etable{\endgraf\afterenvbreak} |
-\let\Eftable\Etable |
-\let\Evtable\Etable |
-\let\Eitemize\Etable |
-\let\Eenumerate\Etable |
- |
-% This is the counter used by @enumerate, which is really @itemize |
- |
-\newcount \itemno |
- |
-\envdef\itemize{\parsearg\doitemize} |
- |
-\def\doitemize#1{% |
- \aboveenvbreak |
- \itemmax=\itemindent |
- \advance\itemmax by -\itemmargin |
- \advance\leftskip by \itemindent |
- \exdentamount=\itemindent |
- \parindent=0pt |
- \parskip=\smallskipamount |
- \ifdim\parskip=0pt \parskip=2pt \fi |
- \def\itemcontents{#1}% |
- % @itemize with no arg is equivalent to @itemize @bullet. |
- \ifx\itemcontents\empty\def\itemcontents{\bullet}\fi |
- \let\item=\itemizeitem |
-} |
- |
-% Definition of @item while inside @itemize and @enumerate. |
-% |
-\def\itemizeitem{% |
- \advance\itemno by 1 % for enumerations |
- {\let\par=\endgraf \smallbreak}% reasonable place to break |
- {% |
- % If the document has an @itemize directly after a section title, a |
- % \nobreak will be last on the list, and \sectionheading will have |
- % done a \vskip-\parskip. In that case, we don't want to zero |
- % parskip, or the item text will crash with the heading. On the |
- % other hand, when there is normal text preceding the item (as there |
- % usually is), we do want to zero parskip, or there would be too much |
- % space. In that case, we won't have a \nobreak before. At least |
- % that's the theory. |
- \ifnum\lastpenalty<10000 \parskip=0in \fi |
- \noindent |
- \hbox to 0pt{\hss \itemcontents \kern\itemmargin}% |
- \vadjust{\penalty 1200}}% not good to break after first line of item. |
- \flushcr |
-} |
- |
-% \splitoff TOKENS\endmark defines \first to be the first token in |
-% TOKENS, and \rest to be the remainder. |
-% |
-\def\splitoff#1#2\endmark{\def\first{#1}\def\rest{#2}}% |
- |
-% Allow an optional argument of an uppercase letter, lowercase letter, |
-% or number, to specify the first label in the enumerated list. No |
-% argument is the same as `1'. |
-% |
-\envparseargdef\enumerate{\enumeratey #1 \endenumeratey} |
-\def\enumeratey #1 #2\endenumeratey{% |
- % If we were given no argument, pretend we were given `1'. |
- \def\thearg{#1}% |
- \ifx\thearg\empty \def\thearg{1}\fi |
- % |
- % Detect if the argument is a single token. If so, it might be a |
- % letter. Otherwise, the only valid thing it can be is a number. |
- % (We will always have one token, because of the test we just made. |
- % This is a good thing, since \splitoff doesn't work given nothing at |
- % all -- the first parameter is undelimited.) |
- \expandafter\splitoff\thearg\endmark |
- \ifx\rest\empty |
- % Only one token in the argument. It could still be anything. |
- % A ``lowercase letter'' is one whose \lccode is nonzero. |
- % An ``uppercase letter'' is one whose \lccode is both nonzero, and |
- % not equal to itself. |
- % Otherwise, we assume it's a number. |
- % |
- % We need the \relax at the end of the \ifnum lines to stop TeX from |
- % continuing to look for a <number>. |
- % |
- \ifnum\lccode\expandafter`\thearg=0\relax |
- \numericenumerate % a number (we hope) |
- \else |
- % It's a letter. |
- \ifnum\lccode\expandafter`\thearg=\expandafter`\thearg\relax |
- \lowercaseenumerate % lowercase letter |
- \else |
- \uppercaseenumerate % uppercase letter |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \else |
- % Multiple tokens in the argument. We hope it's a number. |
- \numericenumerate |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% An @enumerate whose labels are integers. The starting integer is |
-% given in \thearg. |
-% |
-\def\numericenumerate{% |
- \itemno = \thearg |
- \startenumeration{\the\itemno}% |
-} |
- |
-% The starting (lowercase) letter is in \thearg. |
-\def\lowercaseenumerate{% |
- \itemno = \expandafter`\thearg |
- \startenumeration{% |
- % Be sure we're not beyond the end of the alphabet. |
- \ifnum\itemno=0 |
- \errmessage{No more lowercase letters in @enumerate; get a bigger |
- alphabet}% |
- \fi |
- \char\lccode\itemno |
- }% |
-} |
- |
-% The starting (uppercase) letter is in \thearg. |
-\def\uppercaseenumerate{% |
- \itemno = \expandafter`\thearg |
- \startenumeration{% |
- % Be sure we're not beyond the end of the alphabet. |
- \ifnum\itemno=0 |
- \errmessage{No more uppercase letters in @enumerate; get a bigger |
- alphabet} |
- \fi |
- \char\uccode\itemno |
- }% |
-} |
- |
-% Call \doitemize, adding a period to the first argument and supplying the |
-% common last two arguments. Also subtract one from the initial value in |
-% \itemno, since @item increments \itemno. |
-% |
-\def\startenumeration#1{% |
- \advance\itemno by -1 |
- \doitemize{#1.}\flushcr |
-} |
- |
-% @alphaenumerate and @capsenumerate are abbreviations for giving an arg |
-% to @enumerate. |
-% |
-\def\alphaenumerate{\enumerate{a}} |
-\def\capsenumerate{\enumerate{A}} |
-\def\Ealphaenumerate{\Eenumerate} |
-\def\Ecapsenumerate{\Eenumerate} |
- |
- |
-% @multitable macros |
-% Amy Hendrickson, 8/18/94, 3/6/96 |
-% |
-% @multitable ... @end multitable will make as many columns as desired. |
-% Contents of each column will wrap at width given in preamble. Width |
-% can be specified either with sample text given in a template line, |
-% or in percent of \hsize, the current width of text on page. |
- |
-% Table can continue over pages but will only break between lines. |
- |
-% To make preamble: |
-% |
-% Either define widths of columns in terms of percent of \hsize: |
-% @multitable @columnfractions .25 .3 .45 |
-% @item ... |
-% |
-% Numbers following @columnfractions are the percent of the total |
-% current hsize to be used for each column. You may use as many |
-% columns as desired. |
- |
- |
-% Or use a template: |
-% @multitable {Column 1 template} {Column 2 template} {Column 3 template} |
-% @item ... |
-% using the widest term desired in each column. |
- |
-% Each new table line starts with @item, each subsequent new column |
-% starts with @tab. Empty columns may be produced by supplying @tab's |
-% with nothing between them for as many times as empty columns are needed, |
-% ie, @tab@tab@tab will produce two empty columns. |
- |
-% @item, @tab do not need to be on their own lines, but it will not hurt |
-% if they are. |
- |
-% Sample multitable: |
- |
-% @multitable {Column 1 template} {Column 2 template} {Column 3 template} |
-% @item first col stuff @tab second col stuff @tab third col |
-% @item |
-% first col stuff |
-% @tab |
-% second col stuff |
-% @tab |
-% third col |
-% @item first col stuff @tab second col stuff |
-% @tab Many paragraphs of text may be used in any column. |
-% |
-% They will wrap at the width determined by the template. |
-% @item@tab@tab This will be in third column. |
-% @end multitable |
- |
-% Default dimensions may be reset by user. |
-% @multitableparskip is vertical space between paragraphs in table. |
-% @multitableparindent is paragraph indent in table. |
-% @multitablecolmargin is horizontal space to be left between columns. |
-% @multitablelinespace is space to leave between table items, baseline |
-% to baseline. |
-% 0pt means it depends on current normal line spacing. |
-% |
-\newskip\multitableparskip |
-\newskip\multitableparindent |
-\newdimen\multitablecolspace |
-\newskip\multitablelinespace |
-\multitableparskip=0pt |
-\multitableparindent=6pt |
-\multitablecolspace=12pt |
-\multitablelinespace=0pt |
- |
-% Macros used to set up halign preamble: |
-% |
-\let\endsetuptable\relax |
-\def\xendsetuptable{\endsetuptable} |
-\let\columnfractions\relax |
-\def\xcolumnfractions{\columnfractions} |
-\newif\ifsetpercent |
- |
-% #1 is the @columnfraction, usually a decimal number like .5, but might |
-% be just 1. We just use it, whatever it is. |
-% |
-\def\pickupwholefraction#1 {% |
- \global\advance\colcount by 1 |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname col\the\colcount\endcsname{#1\hsize}% |
- \setuptable |
-} |
- |
-\newcount\colcount |
-\def\setuptable#1{% |
- \def\firstarg{#1}% |
- \ifx\firstarg\xendsetuptable |
- \let\go = \relax |
- \else |
- \ifx\firstarg\xcolumnfractions |
- \global\setpercenttrue |
- \else |
- \ifsetpercent |
- \let\go\pickupwholefraction |
- \else |
- \global\advance\colcount by 1 |
- \setbox0=\hbox{#1\unskip\space}% Add a normal word space as a |
- % separator; typically that is always in the input, anyway. |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname col\the\colcount\endcsname{\the\wd0}% |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \ifx\go\pickupwholefraction |
- % Put the argument back for the \pickupwholefraction call, so |
- % we'll always have a period there to be parsed. |
- \def\go{\pickupwholefraction#1}% |
- \else |
- \let\go = \setuptable |
- \fi% |
- \fi |
- \go |
-} |
- |
-% multitable-only commands. |
-% |
-% @headitem starts a heading row, which we typeset in bold. |
-% Assignments have to be global since we are inside the implicit group |
-% of an alignment entry. Note that \everycr resets \everytab. |
-\def\headitem{\checkenv\multitable \crcr \global\everytab={\bf}\the\everytab}% |
-% |
-% A \tab used to include \hskip1sp. But then the space in a template |
-% line is not enough. That is bad. So let's go back to just `&' until |
-% we encounter the problem it was intended to solve again. |
-% --karl, nathan@acm.org, 20apr99. |
-\def\tab{\checkenv\multitable &\the\everytab}% |
- |
-% @multitable ... @end multitable definitions: |
-% |
-\newtoks\everytab % insert after every tab. |
-% |
-\envdef\multitable{% |
- \vskip\parskip |
- \startsavinginserts |
- % |
- % @item within a multitable starts a normal row. |
- % We use \def instead of \let so that if one of the multitable entries |
- % contains an @itemize, we don't choke on the \item (seen as \crcr aka |
- % \endtemplate) expanding \doitemize. |
- \def\item{\crcr}% |
- % |
- \tolerance=9500 |
- \hbadness=9500 |
- \setmultitablespacing |
- \parskip=\multitableparskip |
- \parindent=\multitableparindent |
- \overfullrule=0pt |
- \global\colcount=0 |
- % |
- \everycr = {% |
- \noalign{% |
- \global\everytab={}% |
- \global\colcount=0 % Reset the column counter. |
- % Check for saved footnotes, etc. |
- \checkinserts |
- % Keeps underfull box messages off when table breaks over pages. |
- %\filbreak |
- % Maybe so, but it also creates really weird page breaks when the |
- % table breaks over pages. Wouldn't \vfil be better? Wait until the |
- % problem manifests itself, so it can be fixed for real --karl. |
- }% |
- }% |
- % |
- \parsearg\domultitable |
-} |
-\def\domultitable#1{% |
- % To parse everything between @multitable and @item: |
- \setuptable#1 \endsetuptable |
- % |
- % This preamble sets up a generic column definition, which will |
- % be used as many times as user calls for columns. |
- % \vtop will set a single line and will also let text wrap and |
- % continue for many paragraphs if desired. |
- \halign\bgroup &% |
- \global\advance\colcount by 1 |
- \multistrut |
- \vtop{% |
- % Use the current \colcount to find the correct column width: |
- \hsize=\expandafter\csname col\the\colcount\endcsname |
- % |
- % In order to keep entries from bumping into each other |
- % we will add a \leftskip of \multitablecolspace to all columns after |
- % the first one. |
- % |
- % If a template has been used, we will add \multitablecolspace |
- % to the width of each template entry. |
- % |
- % If the user has set preamble in terms of percent of \hsize we will |
- % use that dimension as the width of the column, and the \leftskip |
- % will keep entries from bumping into each other. Table will start at |
- % left margin and final column will justify at right margin. |
- % |
- % Make sure we don't inherit \rightskip from the outer environment. |
- \rightskip=0pt |
- \ifnum\colcount=1 |
- % The first column will be indented with the surrounding text. |
- \advance\hsize by\leftskip |
- \else |
- \ifsetpercent \else |
- % If user has not set preamble in terms of percent of \hsize |
- % we will advance \hsize by \multitablecolspace. |
- \advance\hsize by \multitablecolspace |
- \fi |
- % In either case we will make \leftskip=\multitablecolspace: |
- \leftskip=\multitablecolspace |
- \fi |
- % Ignoring space at the beginning and end avoids an occasional spurious |
- % blank line, when TeX decides to break the line at the space before the |
- % box from the multistrut, so the strut ends up on a line by itself. |
- % For example: |
- % @multitable @columnfractions .11 .89 |
- % @item @code{#} |
- % @tab Legal holiday which is valid in major parts of the whole country. |
- % Is automatically provided with highlighting sequences respectively |
- % marking characters. |
- \noindent\ignorespaces##\unskip\multistrut |
- }\cr |
-} |
-\def\Emultitable{% |
- \crcr |
- \egroup % end the \halign |
- \global\setpercentfalse |
-} |
- |
-\def\setmultitablespacing{% |
- \def\multistrut{\strut}% just use the standard line spacing |
- % |
- % Compute \multitablelinespace (if not defined by user) for use in |
- % \multitableparskip calculation. We used define \multistrut based on |
- % this, but (ironically) that caused the spacing to be off. |
- % See bug-texinfo report from Werner Lemberg, 31 Oct 2004 12:52:20 +0100. |
-\ifdim\multitablelinespace=0pt |
-\setbox0=\vbox{X}\global\multitablelinespace=\the\baselineskip |
-\global\advance\multitablelinespace by-\ht0 |
-\fi |
-%% Test to see if parskip is larger than space between lines of |
-%% table. If not, do nothing. |
-%% If so, set to same dimension as multitablelinespace. |
-\ifdim\multitableparskip>\multitablelinespace |
-\global\multitableparskip=\multitablelinespace |
-\global\advance\multitableparskip-7pt %% to keep parskip somewhat smaller |
- %% than skip between lines in the table. |
-\fi% |
-\ifdim\multitableparskip=0pt |
-\global\multitableparskip=\multitablelinespace |
-\global\advance\multitableparskip-7pt %% to keep parskip somewhat smaller |
- %% than skip between lines in the table. |
-\fi} |
- |
- |
-\message{conditionals,} |
- |
-% @iftex, @ifnotdocbook, @ifnothtml, @ifnotinfo, @ifnotplaintext, |
-% @ifnotxml always succeed. They currently do nothing; we don't |
-% attempt to check whether the conditionals are properly nested. But we |
-% have to remember that they are conditionals, so that @end doesn't |
-% attempt to close an environment group. |
-% |
-\def\makecond#1{% |
- \expandafter\let\csname #1\endcsname = \relax |
- \expandafter\let\csname iscond.#1\endcsname = 1 |
-} |
-\makecond{iftex} |
-\makecond{ifnotdocbook} |
-\makecond{ifnothtml} |
-\makecond{ifnotinfo} |
-\makecond{ifnotplaintext} |
-\makecond{ifnotxml} |
- |
-% Ignore @ignore, @ifhtml, @ifinfo, and the like. |
-% |
-\def\direntry{\doignore{direntry}} |
-\def\documentdescription{\doignore{documentdescription}} |
-\def\docbook{\doignore{docbook}} |
-\def\html{\doignore{html}} |
-\def\ifdocbook{\doignore{ifdocbook}} |
-\def\ifhtml{\doignore{ifhtml}} |
-\def\ifinfo{\doignore{ifinfo}} |
-\def\ifnottex{\doignore{ifnottex}} |
-\def\ifplaintext{\doignore{ifplaintext}} |
-\def\ifxml{\doignore{ifxml}} |
-\def\ignore{\doignore{ignore}} |
-\def\menu{\doignore{menu}} |
-\def\xml{\doignore{xml}} |
- |
-% Ignore text until a line `@end #1', keeping track of nested conditionals. |
-% |
-% A count to remember the depth of nesting. |
-\newcount\doignorecount |
- |
-\def\doignore#1{\begingroup |
- % Scan in ``verbatim'' mode: |
- \obeylines |
- \catcode`\@ = \other |
- \catcode`\{ = \other |
- \catcode`\} = \other |
- % |
- % Make sure that spaces turn into tokens that match what \doignoretext wants. |
- \spaceisspace |
- % |
- % Count number of #1's that we've seen. |
- \doignorecount = 0 |
- % |
- % Swallow text until we reach the matching `@end #1'. |
- \dodoignore{#1}% |
-} |
- |
-{ \catcode`_=11 % We want to use \_STOP_ which cannot appear in texinfo source. |
- \obeylines % |
- % |
- \gdef\dodoignore#1{% |
- % #1 contains the command name as a string, e.g., `ifinfo'. |
- % |
- % Define a command to find the next `@end #1'. |
- \long\def\doignoretext##1^^M@end #1{% |
- \doignoretextyyy##1^^M@#1\_STOP_}% |
- % |
- % And this command to find another #1 command, at the beginning of a |
- % line. (Otherwise, we would consider a line `@c @ifset', for |
- % example, to count as an @ifset for nesting.) |
- \long\def\doignoretextyyy##1^^M@#1##2\_STOP_{\doignoreyyy{##2}\_STOP_}% |
- % |
- % And now expand that command. |
- \doignoretext ^^M% |
- }% |
-} |
- |
-\def\doignoreyyy#1{% |
- \def\temp{#1}% |
- \ifx\temp\empty % Nothing found. |
- \let\next\doignoretextzzz |
- \else % Found a nested condition, ... |
- \advance\doignorecount by 1 |
- \let\next\doignoretextyyy % ..., look for another. |
- % If we're here, #1 ends with ^^M\ifinfo (for example). |
- \fi |
- \next #1% the token \_STOP_ is present just after this macro. |
-} |
- |
-% We have to swallow the remaining "\_STOP_". |
-% |
-\def\doignoretextzzz#1{% |
- \ifnum\doignorecount = 0 % We have just found the outermost @end. |
- \let\next\enddoignore |
- \else % Still inside a nested condition. |
- \advance\doignorecount by -1 |
- \let\next\doignoretext % Look for the next @end. |
- \fi |
- \next |
-} |
- |
-% Finish off ignored text. |
-{ \obeylines% |
- % Ignore anything after the last `@end #1'; this matters in verbatim |
- % environments, where otherwise the newline after an ignored conditional |
- % would result in a blank line in the output. |
- \gdef\enddoignore#1^^M{\endgroup\ignorespaces}% |
-} |
- |
- |
-% @set VAR sets the variable VAR to an empty value. |
-% @set VAR REST-OF-LINE sets VAR to the value REST-OF-LINE. |
-% |
-% Since we want to separate VAR from REST-OF-LINE (which might be |
-% empty), we can't just use \parsearg; we have to insert a space of our |
-% own to delimit the rest of the line, and then take it out again if we |
-% didn't need it. |
-% We rely on the fact that \parsearg sets \catcode`\ =10. |
-% |
-\parseargdef\set{\setyyy#1 \endsetyyy} |
-\def\setyyy#1 #2\endsetyyy{% |
- {% |
- \makevalueexpandable |
- \def\temp{#2}% |
- \edef\next{\gdef\makecsname{SET#1}}% |
- \ifx\temp\empty |
- \next{}% |
- \else |
- \setzzz#2\endsetzzz |
- \fi |
- }% |
-} |
-% Remove the trailing space \setxxx inserted. |
-\def\setzzz#1 \endsetzzz{\next{#1}} |
- |
-% @clear VAR clears (i.e., unsets) the variable VAR. |
-% |
-\parseargdef\clear{% |
- {% |
- \makevalueexpandable |
- \global\expandafter\let\csname SET#1\endcsname=\relax |
- }% |
-} |
- |
-% @value{foo} gets the text saved in variable foo. |
-\def\value{\begingroup\makevalueexpandable\valuexxx} |
-\def\valuexxx#1{\expandablevalue{#1}\endgroup} |
-{ |
- \catcode`\- = \active \catcode`\_ = \active |
- % |
- \gdef\makevalueexpandable{% |
- \let\value = \expandablevalue |
- % We don't want these characters active, ... |
- \catcode`\-=\other \catcode`\_=\other |
- % ..., but we might end up with active ones in the argument if |
- % we're called from @code, as @code{@value{foo-bar_}}, though. |
- % So \let them to their normal equivalents. |
- \let-\realdash \let_\normalunderscore |
- } |
-} |
- |
-% We have this subroutine so that we can handle at least some @value's |
-% properly in indexes (we call \makevalueexpandable in \indexdummies). |
-% The command has to be fully expandable (if the variable is set), since |
-% the result winds up in the index file. This means that if the |
-% variable's value contains other Texinfo commands, it's almost certain |
-% it will fail (although perhaps we could fix that with sufficient work |
-% to do a one-level expansion on the result, instead of complete). |
-% |
-\def\expandablevalue#1{% |
- \expandafter\ifx\csname SET#1\endcsname\relax |
- {[No value for ``#1'']}% |
- \message{Variable `#1', used in @value, is not set.}% |
- \else |
- \csname SET#1\endcsname |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% @ifset VAR ... @end ifset reads the `...' iff VAR has been defined |
-% with @set. |
-% |
-% To get special treatment of `@end ifset,' call \makeond and the redefine. |
-% |
-\makecond{ifset} |
-\def\ifset{\parsearg{\doifset{\let\next=\ifsetfail}}} |
-\def\doifset#1#2{% |
- {% |
- \makevalueexpandable |
- \let\next=\empty |
- \expandafter\ifx\csname SET#2\endcsname\relax |
- #1% If not set, redefine \next. |
- \fi |
- \expandafter |
- }\next |
-} |
-\def\ifsetfail{\doignore{ifset}} |
- |
-% @ifclear VAR ... @end ifclear reads the `...' iff VAR has never been |
-% defined with @set, or has been undefined with @clear. |
-% |
-% The `\else' inside the `\doifset' parameter is a trick to reuse the |
-% above code: if the variable is not set, do nothing, if it is set, |
-% then redefine \next to \ifclearfail. |
-% |
-\makecond{ifclear} |
-\def\ifclear{\parsearg{\doifset{\else \let\next=\ifclearfail}}} |
-\def\ifclearfail{\doignore{ifclear}} |
- |
-% @dircategory CATEGORY -- specify a category of the dir file |
-% which this file should belong to. Ignore this in TeX. |
-\let\dircategory=\comment |
- |
-% @defininfoenclose. |
-\let\definfoenclose=\comment |
- |
- |
-\message{indexing,} |
-% Index generation facilities |
- |
-% Define \newwrite to be identical to plain tex's \newwrite |
-% except not \outer, so it can be used within macros and \if's. |
-\edef\newwrite{\makecsname{ptexnewwrite}} |
- |
-% \newindex {foo} defines an index named foo. |
-% It automatically defines \fooindex such that |
-% \fooindex ...rest of line... puts an entry in the index foo. |
-% It also defines \fooindfile to be the number of the output channel for |
-% the file that accumulates this index. The file's extension is foo. |
-% The name of an index should be no more than 2 characters long |
-% for the sake of vms. |
-% |
-\def\newindex#1{% |
- \iflinks |
- \expandafter\newwrite \csname#1indfile\endcsname |
- \openout \csname#1indfile\endcsname \jobname.#1 % Open the file |
- \fi |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname#1index\endcsname{% % Define @#1index |
- \noexpand\doindex{#1}} |
-} |
- |
-% @defindex foo == \newindex{foo} |
-% |
-\def\defindex{\parsearg\newindex} |
- |
-% Define @defcodeindex, like @defindex except put all entries in @code. |
-% |
-\def\defcodeindex{\parsearg\newcodeindex} |
-% |
-\def\newcodeindex#1{% |
- \iflinks |
- \expandafter\newwrite \csname#1indfile\endcsname |
- \openout \csname#1indfile\endcsname \jobname.#1 |
- \fi |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname#1index\endcsname{% |
- \noexpand\docodeindex{#1}}% |
-} |
- |
- |
-% @synindex foo bar makes index foo feed into index bar. |
-% Do this instead of @defindex foo if you don't want it as a separate index. |
-% |
-% @syncodeindex foo bar similar, but put all entries made for index foo |
-% inside @code. |
-% |
-\def\synindex#1 #2 {\dosynindex\doindex{#1}{#2}} |
-\def\syncodeindex#1 #2 {\dosynindex\docodeindex{#1}{#2}} |
- |
-% #1 is \doindex or \docodeindex, #2 the index getting redefined (foo), |
-% #3 the target index (bar). |
-\def\dosynindex#1#2#3{% |
- % Only do \closeout if we haven't already done it, else we'll end up |
- % closing the target index. |
- \expandafter \ifx\csname donesynindex#2\endcsname \undefined |
- % The \closeout helps reduce unnecessary open files; the limit on the |
- % Acorn RISC OS is a mere 16 files. |
- \expandafter\closeout\csname#2indfile\endcsname |
- \expandafter\let\csname\donesynindex#2\endcsname = 1 |
- \fi |
- % redefine \fooindfile: |
- \expandafter\let\expandafter\temp\expandafter=\csname#3indfile\endcsname |
- \expandafter\let\csname#2indfile\endcsname=\temp |
- % redefine \fooindex: |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname#2index\endcsname{\noexpand#1{#3}}% |
-} |
- |
-% Define \doindex, the driver for all \fooindex macros. |
-% Argument #1 is generated by the calling \fooindex macro, |
-% and it is "foo", the name of the index. |
- |
-% \doindex just uses \parsearg; it calls \doind for the actual work. |
-% This is because \doind is more useful to call from other macros. |
- |
-% There is also \dosubind {index}{topic}{subtopic} |
-% which makes an entry in a two-level index such as the operation index. |
- |
-\def\doindex#1{\edef\indexname{#1}\parsearg\singleindexer} |
-\def\singleindexer #1{\doind{\indexname}{#1}} |
- |
-% like the previous two, but they put @code around the argument. |
-\def\docodeindex#1{\edef\indexname{#1}\parsearg\singlecodeindexer} |
-\def\singlecodeindexer #1{\doind{\indexname}{\code{#1}}} |
- |
-% Take care of Texinfo commands that can appear in an index entry. |
-% Since there are some commands we want to expand, and others we don't, |
-% we have to laboriously prevent expansion for those that we don't. |
-% |
-\def\indexdummies{% |
- \escapechar = `\\ % use backslash in output files. |
- \def\@{@}% change to @@ when we switch to @ as escape char in index files. |
- \def\ {\realbackslash\space }% |
- % |
- % Need these in case \tex is in effect and \{ is a \delimiter again. |
- % But can't use \lbracecmd and \rbracecmd because texindex assumes |
- % braces and backslashes are used only as delimiters. |
- \let\{ = \mylbrace |
- \let\} = \myrbrace |
- % |
- % I don't entirely understand this, but when an index entry is |
- % generated from a macro call, the \endinput which \scanmacro inserts |
- % causes processing to be prematurely terminated. This is, |
- % apparently, because \indexsorttmp is fully expanded, and \endinput |
- % is an expandable command. The redefinition below makes \endinput |
- % disappear altogether for that purpose -- although logging shows that |
- % processing continues to some further point. On the other hand, it |
- % seems \endinput does not hurt in the printed index arg, since that |
- % is still getting written without apparent harm. |
- % |
- % Sample source (mac-idx3.tex, reported by Graham Percival to |
- % help-texinfo, 22may06): |
- % @macro funindex {WORD} |
- % @findex xyz |
- % @end macro |
- % ... |
- % @funindex commtest |
- % |
- % The above is not enough to reproduce the bug, but it gives the flavor. |
- % |
- % Sample whatsit resulting: |
- % .@write3{\entry{xyz}{@folio }{@code {xyz@endinput }}} |
- % |
- % So: |
- \let\endinput = \empty |
- % |
- % Do the redefinitions. |
- \commondummies |
-} |
- |
-% For the aux and toc files, @ is the escape character. So we want to |
-% redefine everything using @ as the escape character (instead of |
-% \realbackslash, still used for index files). When everything uses @, |
-% this will be simpler. |
-% |
-\def\atdummies{% |
- \def\@{@@}% |
- \def\ {@ }% |
- \let\{ = \lbraceatcmd |
- \let\} = \rbraceatcmd |
- % |
- % Do the redefinitions. |
- \commondummies |
- \otherbackslash |
-} |
- |
-% Called from \indexdummies and \atdummies. |
-% |
-\def\commondummies{% |
- % |
- % \definedummyword defines \#1 as \string\#1\space, thus effectively |
- % preventing its expansion. This is used only for control% words, |
- % not control letters, because the \space would be incorrect for |
- % control characters, but is needed to separate the control word |
- % from whatever follows. |
- % |
- % For control letters, we have \definedummyletter, which omits the |
- % space. |
- % |
- % These can be used both for control words that take an argument and |
- % those that do not. If it is followed by {arg} in the input, then |
- % that will dutifully get written to the index (or wherever). |
- % |
- \def\definedummyword ##1{\def##1{\string##1\space}}% |
- \def\definedummyletter##1{\def##1{\string##1}}% |
- \let\definedummyaccent\definedummyletter |
- % |
- \commondummiesnofonts |
- % |
- \definedummyletter\_% |
- % |
- % Non-English letters. |
- \definedummyword\AA |
- \definedummyword\AE |
- \definedummyword\L |
- \definedummyword\OE |
- \definedummyword\O |
- \definedummyword\aa |
- \definedummyword\ae |
- \definedummyword\l |
- \definedummyword\oe |
- \definedummyword\o |
- \definedummyword\ss |
- \definedummyword\exclamdown |
- \definedummyword\questiondown |
- \definedummyword\ordf |
- \definedummyword\ordm |
- % |
- % Although these internal commands shouldn't show up, sometimes they do. |
- \definedummyword\bf |
- \definedummyword\gtr |
- \definedummyword\hat |
- \definedummyword\less |
- \definedummyword\sf |
- \definedummyword\sl |
- \definedummyword\tclose |
- \definedummyword\tt |
- % |
- \definedummyword\LaTeX |
- \definedummyword\TeX |
- % |
- % Assorted special characters. |
- \definedummyword\bullet |
- \definedummyword\comma |
- \definedummyword\copyright |
- \definedummyword\registeredsymbol |
- \definedummyword\dots |
- \definedummyword\enddots |
- \definedummyword\equiv |
- \definedummyword\error |
- \definedummyword\euro |
- \definedummyword\guillemetleft |
- \definedummyword\guillemetright |
- \definedummyword\guilsinglleft |
- \definedummyword\guilsinglright |
- \definedummyword\expansion |
- \definedummyword\minus |
- \definedummyword\pounds |
- \definedummyword\point |
- \definedummyword\print |
- \definedummyword\quotedblbase |
- \definedummyword\quotedblleft |
- \definedummyword\quotedblright |
- \definedummyword\quoteleft |
- \definedummyword\quoteright |
- \definedummyword\quotesinglbase |
- \definedummyword\result |
- \definedummyword\textdegree |
- % |
- % We want to disable all macros so that they are not expanded by \write. |
- \macrolist |
- % |
- \normalturnoffactive |
- % |
- % Handle some cases of @value -- where it does not contain any |
- % (non-fully-expandable) commands. |
- \makevalueexpandable |
-} |
- |
-% \commondummiesnofonts: common to \commondummies and \indexnofonts. |
-% |
-\def\commondummiesnofonts{% |
- % Control letters and accents. |
- \definedummyletter\!% |
- \definedummyaccent\"% |
- \definedummyaccent\'% |
- \definedummyletter\*% |
- \definedummyaccent\,% |
- \definedummyletter\.% |
- \definedummyletter\/% |
- \definedummyletter\:% |
- \definedummyaccent\=% |
- \definedummyletter\?% |
- \definedummyaccent\^% |
- \definedummyaccent\`% |
- \definedummyaccent\~% |
- \definedummyword\u |
- \definedummyword\v |
- \definedummyword\H |
- \definedummyword\dotaccent |
- \definedummyword\ringaccent |
- \definedummyword\tieaccent |
- \definedummyword\ubaraccent |
- \definedummyword\udotaccent |
- \definedummyword\dotless |
- % |
- % Texinfo font commands. |
- \definedummyword\b |
- \definedummyword\i |
- \definedummyword\r |
- \definedummyword\sc |
- \definedummyword\t |
- % |
- % Commands that take arguments. |
- \definedummyword\acronym |
- \definedummyword\cite |
- \definedummyword\code |
- \definedummyword\command |
- \definedummyword\dfn |
- \definedummyword\emph |
- \definedummyword\env |
- \definedummyword\file |
- \definedummyword\kbd |
- \definedummyword\key |
- \definedummyword\math |
- \definedummyword\option |
- \definedummyword\pxref |
- \definedummyword\ref |
- \definedummyword\samp |
- \definedummyword\strong |
- \definedummyword\tie |
- \definedummyword\uref |
- \definedummyword\url |
- \definedummyword\var |
- \definedummyword\verb |
- \definedummyword\w |
- \definedummyword\xref |
-} |
- |
-% \indexnofonts is used when outputting the strings to sort the index |
-% by, and when constructing control sequence names. It eliminates all |
-% control sequences and just writes whatever the best ASCII sort string |
-% would be for a given command (usually its argument). |
-% |
-\def\indexnofonts{% |
- % Accent commands should become @asis. |
- \def\definedummyaccent##1{\let##1\asis}% |
- % We can just ignore other control letters. |
- \def\definedummyletter##1{\let##1\empty}% |
- % Hopefully, all control words can become @asis. |
- \let\definedummyword\definedummyaccent |
- % |
- \commondummiesnofonts |
- % |
- % Don't no-op \tt, since it isn't a user-level command |
- % and is used in the definitions of the active chars like <, >, |, etc. |
- % Likewise with the other plain tex font commands. |
- %\let\tt=\asis |
- % |
- \def\ { }% |
- \def\@{@}% |
- % how to handle braces? |
- \def\_{\normalunderscore}% |
- % |
- % Non-English letters. |
- \def\AA{AA}% |
- \def\AE{AE}% |
- \def\L{L}% |
- \def\OE{OE}% |
- \def\O{O}% |
- \def\aa{aa}% |
- \def\ae{ae}% |
- \def\l{l}% |
- \def\oe{oe}% |
- \def\o{o}% |
- \def\ss{ss}% |
- \def\exclamdown{!}% |
- \def\questiondown{?}% |
- \def\ordf{a}% |
- \def\ordm{o}% |
- % |
- \def\LaTeX{LaTeX}% |
- \def\TeX{TeX}% |
- % |
- % Assorted special characters. |
- % (The following {} will end up in the sort string, but that's ok.) |
- \def\bullet{bullet}% |
- \def\comma{,}% |
- \def\copyright{copyright}% |
- \def\registeredsymbol{R}% |
- \def\dots{...}% |
- \def\enddots{...}% |
- \def\equiv{==}% |
- \def\error{error}% |
- \def\euro{euro}% |
- \def\guillemetleft{<<}% |
- \def\guillemetright{>>}% |
- \def\guilsinglleft{<}% |
- \def\guilsinglright{>}% |
- \def\expansion{==>}% |
- \def\minus{-}% |
- \def\pounds{pounds}% |
- \def\point{.}% |
- \def\print{-|}% |
- \def\quotedblbase{"}% |
- \def\quotedblleft{"}% |
- \def\quotedblright{"}% |
- \def\quoteleft{`}% |
- \def\quoteright{'}% |
- \def\quotesinglbase{,}% |
- \def\result{=>}% |
- \def\textdegree{degrees}% |
- % |
- % We need to get rid of all macros, leaving only the arguments (if present). |
- % Of course this is not nearly correct, but it is the best we can do for now. |
- % makeinfo does not expand macros in the argument to @deffn, which ends up |
- % writing an index entry, and texindex isn't prepared for an index sort entry |
- % that starts with \. |
- % |
- % Since macro invocations are followed by braces, we can just redefine them |
- % to take a single TeX argument. The case of a macro invocation that |
- % goes to end-of-line is not handled. |
- % |
- \macrolist |
-} |
- |
-\let\indexbackslash=0 %overridden during \printindex. |
-\let\SETmarginindex=\relax % put index entries in margin (undocumented)? |
- |
-% Most index entries go through here, but \dosubind is the general case. |
-% #1 is the index name, #2 is the entry text. |
-\def\doind#1#2{\dosubind{#1}{#2}{}} |
- |
-% Workhorse for all \fooindexes. |
-% #1 is name of index, #2 is stuff to put there, #3 is subentry -- |
-% empty if called from \doind, as we usually are (the main exception |
-% is with most defuns, which call us directly). |
-% |
-\def\dosubind#1#2#3{% |
- \iflinks |
- {% |
- % Store the main index entry text (including the third arg). |
- \toks0 = {#2}% |
- % If third arg is present, precede it with a space. |
- \def\thirdarg{#3}% |
- \ifx\thirdarg\empty \else |
- \toks0 = \expandafter{\the\toks0 \space #3}% |
- \fi |
- % |
- \edef\writeto{\csname#1indfile\endcsname}% |
- % |
- \safewhatsit\dosubindwrite |
- }% |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% Write the entry in \toks0 to the index file: |
-% |
-\def\dosubindwrite{% |
- % Put the index entry in the margin if desired. |
- \ifx\SETmarginindex\relax\else |
- \insert\margin{\hbox{\vrule height8pt depth3pt width0pt \the\toks0}}% |
- \fi |
- % |
- % Remember, we are within a group. |
- \indexdummies % Must do this here, since \bf, etc expand at this stage |
- \def\backslashcurfont{\indexbackslash}% \indexbackslash isn't defined now |
- % so it will be output as is; and it will print as backslash. |
- % |
- % Process the index entry with all font commands turned off, to |
- % get the string to sort by. |
- {\indexnofonts |
- \edef\temp{\the\toks0}% need full expansion |
- \xdef\indexsorttmp{\temp}% |
- }% |
- % |
- % Set up the complete index entry, with both the sort key and |
- % the original text, including any font commands. We write |
- % three arguments to \entry to the .?? file (four in the |
- % subentry case), texindex reduces to two when writing the .??s |
- % sorted result. |
- \edef\temp{% |
- \write\writeto{% |
- \string\entry{\indexsorttmp}{\noexpand\folio}{\the\toks0}}% |
- }% |
- \temp |
-} |
- |
-% Take care of unwanted page breaks/skips around a whatsit: |
-% |
-% If a skip is the last thing on the list now, preserve it |
-% by backing up by \lastskip, doing the \write, then inserting |
-% the skip again. Otherwise, the whatsit generated by the |
-% \write or \pdfdest will make \lastskip zero. The result is that |
-% sequences like this: |
-% @end defun |
-% @tindex whatever |
-% @defun ... |
-% will have extra space inserted, because the \medbreak in the |
-% start of the @defun won't see the skip inserted by the @end of |
-% the previous defun. |
-% |
-% But don't do any of this if we're not in vertical mode. We |
-% don't want to do a \vskip and prematurely end a paragraph. |
-% |
-% Avoid page breaks due to these extra skips, too. |
-% |
-% But wait, there is a catch there: |
-% We'll have to check whether \lastskip is zero skip. \ifdim is not |
-% sufficient for this purpose, as it ignores stretch and shrink parts |
-% of the skip. The only way seems to be to check the textual |
-% representation of the skip. |
-% |
-% The following is almost like \def\zeroskipmacro{0.0pt} except that |
-% the ``p'' and ``t'' characters have catcode \other, not 11 (letter). |
-% |
-\edef\zeroskipmacro{\expandafter\the\csname z@skip\endcsname} |
-% |
-\newskip\whatsitskip |
-\newcount\whatsitpenalty |
-% |
-% ..., ready, GO: |
-% |
-\def\safewhatsit#1{% |
-\ifhmode |
- #1% |
-\else |
- % \lastskip and \lastpenalty cannot both be nonzero simultaneously. |
- \whatsitskip = \lastskip |
- \edef\lastskipmacro{\the\lastskip}% |
- \whatsitpenalty = \lastpenalty |
- % |
- % If \lastskip is nonzero, that means the last item was a |
- % skip. And since a skip is discardable, that means this |
- % -\whatsitskip glue we're inserting is preceded by a |
- % non-discardable item, therefore it is not a potential |
- % breakpoint, therefore no \nobreak needed. |
- \ifx\lastskipmacro\zeroskipmacro |
- \else |
- \vskip-\whatsitskip |
- \fi |
- % |
- #1% |
- % |
- \ifx\lastskipmacro\zeroskipmacro |
- % If \lastskip was zero, perhaps the last item was a penalty, and |
- % perhaps it was >=10000, e.g., a \nobreak. In that case, we want |
- % to re-insert the same penalty (values >10000 are used for various |
- % signals); since we just inserted a non-discardable item, any |
- % following glue (such as a \parskip) would be a breakpoint. For example: |
- % |
- % @deffn deffn-whatever |
- % @vindex index-whatever |
- % Description. |
- % would allow a break between the index-whatever whatsit |
- % and the "Description." paragraph. |
- \ifnum\whatsitpenalty>9999 \penalty\whatsitpenalty \fi |
- \else |
- % On the other hand, if we had a nonzero \lastskip, |
- % this make-up glue would be preceded by a non-discardable item |
- % (the whatsit from the \write), so we must insert a \nobreak. |
- \nobreak\vskip\whatsitskip |
- \fi |
-\fi |
-} |
- |
-% The index entry written in the file actually looks like |
-% \entry {sortstring}{page}{topic} |
-% or |
-% \entry {sortstring}{page}{topic}{subtopic} |
-% The texindex program reads in these files and writes files |
-% containing these kinds of lines: |
-% \initial {c} |
-% before the first topic whose initial is c |
-% \entry {topic}{pagelist} |
-% for a topic that is used without subtopics |
-% \primary {topic} |
-% for the beginning of a topic that is used with subtopics |
-% \secondary {subtopic}{pagelist} |
-% for each subtopic. |
- |
-% Define the user-accessible indexing commands |
-% @findex, @vindex, @kindex, @cindex. |
- |
-\def\findex {\fnindex} |
-\def\kindex {\kyindex} |
-\def\cindex {\cpindex} |
-\def\vindex {\vrindex} |
-\def\tindex {\tpindex} |
-\def\pindex {\pgindex} |
- |
-\def\cindexsub {\begingroup\obeylines\cindexsub} |
-{\obeylines % |
-\gdef\cindexsub "#1" #2^^M{\endgroup % |
-\dosubind{cp}{#2}{#1}}} |
- |
-% Define the macros used in formatting output of the sorted index material. |
- |
-% @printindex causes a particular index (the ??s file) to get printed. |
-% It does not print any chapter heading (usually an @unnumbered). |
-% |
-\parseargdef\printindex{\begingroup |
- \dobreak \chapheadingskip{10000}% |
- % |
- \smallfonts \rm |
- \tolerance = 9500 |
- \plainfrenchspacing |
- \everypar = {}% don't want the \kern\-parindent from indentation suppression. |
- % |
- % See if the index file exists and is nonempty. |
- % Change catcode of @ here so that if the index file contains |
- % \initial {@} |
- % as its first line, TeX doesn't complain about mismatched braces |
- % (because it thinks @} is a control sequence). |
- \catcode`\@ = 11 |
- \openin 1 \jobname.#1s |
- \ifeof 1 |
- % \enddoublecolumns gets confused if there is no text in the index, |
- % and it loses the chapter title and the aux file entries for the |
- % index. The easiest way to prevent this problem is to make sure |
- % there is some text. |
- \putwordIndexNonexistent |
- \else |
- % |
- % If the index file exists but is empty, then \openin leaves \ifeof |
- % false. We have to make TeX try to read something from the file, so |
- % it can discover if there is anything in it. |
- \read 1 to \temp |
- \ifeof 1 |
- \putwordIndexIsEmpty |
- \else |
- % Index files are almost Texinfo source, but we use \ as the escape |
- % character. It would be better to use @, but that's too big a change |
- % to make right now. |
- \def\indexbackslash{\backslashcurfont}% |
- \catcode`\\ = 0 |
- \escapechar = `\\ |
- \begindoublecolumns |
- \input \jobname.#1s |
- \enddoublecolumns |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \closein 1 |
-\endgroup} |
- |
-% These macros are used by the sorted index file itself. |
-% Change them to control the appearance of the index. |
- |
-\def\initial#1{{% |
- % Some minor font changes for the special characters. |
- \let\tentt=\sectt \let\tt=\sectt \let\sf=\sectt |
- % |
- % Remove any glue we may have, we'll be inserting our own. |
- \removelastskip |
- % |
- % We like breaks before the index initials, so insert a bonus. |
- \nobreak |
- \vskip 0pt plus 3\baselineskip |
- \penalty 0 |
- \vskip 0pt plus -3\baselineskip |
- % |
- % Typeset the initial. Making this add up to a whole number of |
- % baselineskips increases the chance of the dots lining up from column |
- % to column. It still won't often be perfect, because of the stretch |
- % we need before each entry, but it's better. |
- % |
- % No shrink because it confuses \balancecolumns. |
- \vskip 1.67\baselineskip plus .5\baselineskip |
- \leftline{\secbf #1}% |
- % Do our best not to break after the initial. |
- \nobreak |
- \vskip .33\baselineskip plus .1\baselineskip |
-}} |
- |
-% \entry typesets a paragraph consisting of the text (#1), dot leaders, and |
-% then page number (#2) flushed to the right margin. It is used for index |
-% and table of contents entries. The paragraph is indented by \leftskip. |
-% |
-% A straightforward implementation would start like this: |
-% \def\entry#1#2{... |
-% But this freezes the catcodes in the argument, and can cause problems to |
-% @code, which sets - active. This problem was fixed by a kludge--- |
-% ``-'' was active throughout whole index, but this isn't really right. |
-% |
-% The right solution is to prevent \entry from swallowing the whole text. |
-% --kasal, 21nov03 |
-\def\entry{% |
- \begingroup |
- % |
- % Start a new paragraph if necessary, so our assignments below can't |
- % affect previous text. |
- \par |
- % |
- % Do not fill out the last line with white space. |
- \parfillskip = 0in |
- % |
- % No extra space above this paragraph. |
- \parskip = 0in |
- % |
- % Do not prefer a separate line ending with a hyphen to fewer lines. |
- \finalhyphendemerits = 0 |
- % |
- % \hangindent is only relevant when the entry text and page number |
- % don't both fit on one line. In that case, bob suggests starting the |
- % dots pretty far over on the line. Unfortunately, a large |
- % indentation looks wrong when the entry text itself is broken across |
- % lines. So we use a small indentation and put up with long leaders. |
- % |
- % \hangafter is reset to 1 (which is the value we want) at the start |
- % of each paragraph, so we need not do anything with that. |
- \hangindent = 2em |
- % |
- % When the entry text needs to be broken, just fill out the first line |
- % with blank space. |
- \rightskip = 0pt plus1fil |
- % |
- % A bit of stretch before each entry for the benefit of balancing |
- % columns. |
- \vskip 0pt plus1pt |
- % |
- % Swallow the left brace of the text (first parameter): |
- \afterassignment\doentry |
- \let\temp = |
-} |
-\def\doentry{% |
- \bgroup % Instead of the swallowed brace. |
- \noindent |
- \aftergroup\finishentry |
- % And now comes the text of the entry. |
-} |
-\def\finishentry#1{% |
- % #1 is the page number. |
- % |
- % The following is kludged to not output a line of dots in the index if |
- % there are no page numbers. The next person who breaks this will be |
- % cursed by a Unix daemon. |
- \setbox\boxA = \hbox{#1}% |
- \ifdim\wd\boxA = 0pt |
- \ % |
- \else |
- % |
- % If we must, put the page number on a line of its own, and fill out |
- % this line with blank space. (The \hfil is overwhelmed with the |
- % fill leaders glue in \indexdotfill if the page number does fit.) |
- \hfil\penalty50 |
- \null\nobreak\indexdotfill % Have leaders before the page number. |
- % |
- % The `\ ' here is removed by the implicit \unskip that TeX does as |
- % part of (the primitive) \par. Without it, a spurious underfull |
- % \hbox ensues. |
- \ifpdf |
- \pdfgettoks#1.% |
- \ \the\toksA |
- \else |
- \ #1% |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \par |
- \endgroup |
-} |
- |
-% Like plain.tex's \dotfill, except uses up at least 1 em. |
-\def\indexdotfill{\cleaders |
- \hbox{$\mathsurround=0pt \mkern1.5mu.\mkern1.5mu$}\hskip 1em plus 1fill} |
- |
-\def\primary #1{\line{#1\hfil}} |
- |
-\newskip\secondaryindent \secondaryindent=0.5cm |
-\def\secondary#1#2{{% |
- \parfillskip=0in |
- \parskip=0in |
- \hangindent=1in |
- \hangafter=1 |
- \noindent\hskip\secondaryindent\hbox{#1}\indexdotfill |
- \ifpdf |
- \pdfgettoks#2.\ \the\toksA % The page number ends the paragraph. |
- \else |
- #2 |
- \fi |
- \par |
-}} |
- |
-% Define two-column mode, which we use to typeset indexes. |
-% Adapted from the TeXbook, page 416, which is to say, |
-% the manmac.tex format used to print the TeXbook itself. |
-\catcode`\@=11 |
- |
-\newbox\partialpage |
-\newdimen\doublecolumnhsize |
- |
-\def\begindoublecolumns{\begingroup % ended by \enddoublecolumns |
- % Grab any single-column material above us. |
- \output = {% |
- % |
- % Here is a possibility not foreseen in manmac: if we accumulate a |
- % whole lot of material, we might end up calling this \output |
- % routine twice in a row (see the doublecol-lose test, which is |
- % essentially a couple of indexes with @setchapternewpage off). In |
- % that case we just ship out what is in \partialpage with the normal |
- % output routine. Generally, \partialpage will be empty when this |
- % runs and this will be a no-op. See the indexspread.tex test case. |
- \ifvoid\partialpage \else |
- \onepageout{\pagecontents\partialpage}% |
- \fi |
- % |
- \global\setbox\partialpage = \vbox{% |
- % Unvbox the main output page. |
- \unvbox\PAGE |
- \kern-\topskip \kern\baselineskip |
- }% |
- }% |
- \eject % run that output routine to set \partialpage |
- % |
- % Use the double-column output routine for subsequent pages. |
- \output = {\doublecolumnout}% |
- % |
- % Change the page size parameters. We could do this once outside this |
- % routine, in each of @smallbook, @afourpaper, and the default 8.5x11 |
- % format, but then we repeat the same computation. Repeating a couple |
- % of assignments once per index is clearly meaningless for the |
- % execution time, so we may as well do it in one place. |
- % |
- % First we halve the line length, less a little for the gutter between |
- % the columns. We compute the gutter based on the line length, so it |
- % changes automatically with the paper format. The magic constant |
- % below is chosen so that the gutter has the same value (well, +-<1pt) |
- % as it did when we hard-coded it. |
- % |
- % We put the result in a separate register, \doublecolumhsize, so we |
- % can restore it in \pagesofar, after \hsize itself has (potentially) |
- % been clobbered. |
- % |
- \doublecolumnhsize = \hsize |
- \advance\doublecolumnhsize by -.04154\hsize |
- \divide\doublecolumnhsize by 2 |
- \hsize = \doublecolumnhsize |
- % |
- % Double the \vsize as well. (We don't need a separate register here, |
- % since nobody clobbers \vsize.) |
- \vsize = 2\vsize |
-} |
- |
-% The double-column output routine for all double-column pages except |
-% the last. |
-% |
-\def\doublecolumnout{% |
- \splittopskip=\topskip \splitmaxdepth=\maxdepth |
- % Get the available space for the double columns -- the normal |
- % (undoubled) page height minus any material left over from the |
- % previous page. |
- \dimen@ = \vsize |
- \divide\dimen@ by 2 |
- \advance\dimen@ by -\ht\partialpage |
- % |
- % box0 will be the left-hand column, box2 the right. |
- \setbox0=\vsplit255 to\dimen@ \setbox2=\vsplit255 to\dimen@ |
- \onepageout\pagesofar |
- \unvbox255 |
- \penalty\outputpenalty |
-} |
-% |
-% Re-output the contents of the output page -- any previous material, |
-% followed by the two boxes we just split, in box0 and box2. |
-\def\pagesofar{% |
- \unvbox\partialpage |
- % |
- \hsize = \doublecolumnhsize |
- \wd0=\hsize \wd2=\hsize |
- \hbox to\pagewidth{\box0\hfil\box2}% |
-} |
-% |
-% All done with double columns. |
-\def\enddoublecolumns{% |
- % The following penalty ensures that the page builder is exercised |
- % _before_ we change the output routine. This is necessary in the |
- % following situation: |
- % |
- % The last section of the index consists only of a single entry. |
- % Before this section, \pagetotal is less than \pagegoal, so no |
- % break occurs before the last section starts. However, the last |
- % section, consisting of \initial and the single \entry, does not |
- % fit on the page and has to be broken off. Without the following |
- % penalty the page builder will not be exercised until \eject |
- % below, and by that time we'll already have changed the output |
- % routine to the \balancecolumns version, so the next-to-last |
- % double-column page will be processed with \balancecolumns, which |
- % is wrong: The two columns will go to the main vertical list, with |
- % the broken-off section in the recent contributions. As soon as |
- % the output routine finishes, TeX starts reconsidering the page |
- % break. The two columns and the broken-off section both fit on the |
- % page, because the two columns now take up only half of the page |
- % goal. When TeX sees \eject from below which follows the final |
- % section, it invokes the new output routine that we've set after |
- % \balancecolumns below; \onepageout will try to fit the two columns |
- % and the final section into the vbox of \pageheight (see |
- % \pagebody), causing an overfull box. |
- % |
- % Note that glue won't work here, because glue does not exercise the |
- % page builder, unlike penalties (see The TeXbook, pp. 280-281). |
- \penalty0 |
- % |
- \output = {% |
- % Split the last of the double-column material. Leave it on the |
- % current page, no automatic page break. |
- \balancecolumns |
- % |
- % If we end up splitting too much material for the current page, |
- % though, there will be another page break right after this \output |
- % invocation ends. Having called \balancecolumns once, we do not |
- % want to call it again. Therefore, reset \output to its normal |
- % definition right away. (We hope \balancecolumns will never be |
- % called on to balance too much material, but if it is, this makes |
- % the output somewhat more palatable.) |
- \global\output = {\onepageout{\pagecontents\PAGE}}% |
- }% |
- \eject |
- \endgroup % started in \begindoublecolumns |
- % |
- % \pagegoal was set to the doubled \vsize above, since we restarted |
- % the current page. We're now back to normal single-column |
- % typesetting, so reset \pagegoal to the normal \vsize (after the |
- % \endgroup where \vsize got restored). |
- \pagegoal = \vsize |
-} |
-% |
-% Called at the end of the double column material. |
-\def\balancecolumns{% |
- \setbox0 = \vbox{\unvbox255}% like \box255 but more efficient, see p.120. |
- \dimen@ = \ht0 |
- \advance\dimen@ by \topskip |
- \advance\dimen@ by-\baselineskip |
- \divide\dimen@ by 2 % target to split to |
- %debug\message{final 2-column material height=\the\ht0, target=\the\dimen@.}% |
- \splittopskip = \topskip |
- % Loop until we get a decent breakpoint. |
- {% |
- \vbadness = 10000 |
- \loop |
- \global\setbox3 = \copy0 |
- \global\setbox1 = \vsplit3 to \dimen@ |
- \ifdim\ht3>\dimen@ |
- \global\advance\dimen@ by 1pt |
- \repeat |
- }% |
- %debug\message{split to \the\dimen@, column heights: \the\ht1, \the\ht3.}% |
- \setbox0=\vbox to\dimen@{\unvbox1}% |
- \setbox2=\vbox to\dimen@{\unvbox3}% |
- % |
- \pagesofar |
-} |
-\catcode`\@ = \other |
- |
- |
-\message{sectioning,} |
-% Chapters, sections, etc. |
- |
-% \unnumberedno is an oxymoron, of course. But we count the unnumbered |
-% sections so that we can refer to them unambiguously in the pdf |
-% outlines by their "section number". We avoid collisions with chapter |
-% numbers by starting them at 10000. (If a document ever has 10000 |
-% chapters, we're in trouble anyway, I'm sure.) |
-\newcount\unnumberedno \unnumberedno = 10000 |
-\newcount\chapno |
-\newcount\secno \secno=0 |
-\newcount\subsecno \subsecno=0 |
-\newcount\subsubsecno \subsubsecno=0 |
- |
-% This counter is funny since it counts through charcodes of letters A, B, ... |
-\newcount\appendixno \appendixno = `\@ |
-% |
-% \def\appendixletter{\char\the\appendixno} |
-% We do the following ugly conditional instead of the above simple |
-% construct for the sake of pdftex, which needs the actual |
-% letter in the expansion, not just typeset. |
-% |
-\def\appendixletter{% |
- \ifnum\appendixno=`A A% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`B B% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`C C% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`D D% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`E E% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`F F% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`G G% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`H H% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`I I% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`J J% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`K K% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`L L% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`M M% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`N N% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`O O% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`P P% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`Q Q% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`R R% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`S S% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`T T% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`U U% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`V V% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`W W% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`X X% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`Y Y% |
- \else\ifnum\appendixno=`Z Z% |
- % The \the is necessary, despite appearances, because \appendixletter is |
- % expanded while writing the .toc file. \char\appendixno is not |
- % expandable, thus it is written literally, thus all appendixes come out |
- % with the same letter (or @) in the toc without it. |
- \else\char\the\appendixno |
- \fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi |
- \fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi\fi} |
- |
-% Each @chapter defines these (using marks) as the number+name, number |
-% and name of the chapter. Page headings and footings can use |
-% these. @section does likewise. |
-\def\thischapter{} |
-\def\thischapternum{} |
-\def\thischaptername{} |
-\def\thissection{} |
-\def\thissectionnum{} |
-\def\thissectionname{} |
- |
-\newcount\absseclevel % used to calculate proper heading level |
-\newcount\secbase\secbase=0 % @raisesections/@lowersections modify this count |
- |
-% @raisesections: treat @section as chapter, @subsection as section, etc. |
-\def\raisesections{\global\advance\secbase by -1} |
-\let\up=\raisesections % original BFox name |
- |
-% @lowersections: treat @chapter as section, @section as subsection, etc. |
-\def\lowersections{\global\advance\secbase by 1} |
-\let\down=\lowersections % original BFox name |
- |
-% we only have subsub. |
-\chardef\maxseclevel = 3 |
-% |
-% A numbered section within an unnumbered changes to unnumbered too. |
-% To achive this, remember the "biggest" unnum. sec. we are currently in: |
-\chardef\unmlevel = \maxseclevel |
-% |
-% Trace whether the current chapter is an appendix or not: |
-% \chapheadtype is "N" or "A", unnumbered chapters are ignored. |
-\def\chapheadtype{N} |
- |
-% Choose a heading macro |
-% #1 is heading type |
-% #2 is heading level |
-% #3 is text for heading |
-\def\genhead#1#2#3{% |
- % Compute the abs. sec. level: |
- \absseclevel=#2 |
- \advance\absseclevel by \secbase |
- % Make sure \absseclevel doesn't fall outside the range: |
- \ifnum \absseclevel < 0 |
- \absseclevel = 0 |
- \else |
- \ifnum \absseclevel > 3 |
- \absseclevel = 3 |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- % The heading type: |
- \def\headtype{#1}% |
- \if \headtype U% |
- \ifnum \absseclevel < \unmlevel |
- \chardef\unmlevel = \absseclevel |
- \fi |
- \else |
- % Check for appendix sections: |
- \ifnum \absseclevel = 0 |
- \edef\chapheadtype{\headtype}% |
- \else |
- \if \headtype A\if \chapheadtype N% |
- \errmessage{@appendix... within a non-appendix chapter}% |
- \fi\fi |
- \fi |
- % Check for numbered within unnumbered: |
- \ifnum \absseclevel > \unmlevel |
- \def\headtype{U}% |
- \else |
- \chardef\unmlevel = 3 |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- % Now print the heading: |
- \if \headtype U% |
- \ifcase\absseclevel |
- \unnumberedzzz{#3}% |
- \or \unnumberedseczzz{#3}% |
- \or \unnumberedsubseczzz{#3}% |
- \or \unnumberedsubsubseczzz{#3}% |
- \fi |
- \else |
- \if \headtype A% |
- \ifcase\absseclevel |
- \appendixzzz{#3}% |
- \or \appendixsectionzzz{#3}% |
- \or \appendixsubseczzz{#3}% |
- \or \appendixsubsubseczzz{#3}% |
- \fi |
- \else |
- \ifcase\absseclevel |
- \chapterzzz{#3}% |
- \or \seczzz{#3}% |
- \or \numberedsubseczzz{#3}% |
- \or \numberedsubsubseczzz{#3}% |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \suppressfirstparagraphindent |
-} |
- |
-% an interface: |
-\def\numhead{\genhead N} |
-\def\apphead{\genhead A} |
-\def\unnmhead{\genhead U} |
- |
-% @chapter, @appendix, @unnumbered. Increment top-level counter, reset |
-% all lower-level sectioning counters to zero. |
-% |
-% Also set \chaplevelprefix, which we prepend to @float sequence numbers |
-% (e.g., figures), q.v. By default (before any chapter), that is empty. |
-\let\chaplevelprefix = \empty |
-% |
-\outer\parseargdef\chapter{\numhead0{#1}} % normally numhead0 calls chapterzzz |
-\def\chapterzzz#1{% |
- % section resetting is \global in case the chapter is in a group, such |
- % as an @include file. |
- \global\secno=0 \global\subsecno=0 \global\subsubsecno=0 |
- \global\advance\chapno by 1 |
- % |
- % Used for \float. |
- \gdef\chaplevelprefix{\the\chapno.}% |
- \resetallfloatnos |
- % |
- \message{\putwordChapter\space \the\chapno}% |
- % |
- % Write the actual heading. |
- \chapmacro{#1}{Ynumbered}{\the\chapno}% |
- % |
- % So @section and the like are numbered underneath this chapter. |
- \global\let\section = \numberedsec |
- \global\let\subsection = \numberedsubsec |
- \global\let\subsubsection = \numberedsubsubsec |
-} |
- |
-\outer\parseargdef\appendix{\apphead0{#1}} % normally apphead0 calls appendixzzz |
-\def\appendixzzz#1{% |
- \global\secno=0 \global\subsecno=0 \global\subsubsecno=0 |
- \global\advance\appendixno by 1 |
- \gdef\chaplevelprefix{\appendixletter.}% |
- \resetallfloatnos |
- % |
- \def\appendixnum{\putwordAppendix\space \appendixletter}% |
- \message{\appendixnum}% |
- % |
- \chapmacro{#1}{Yappendix}{\appendixletter}% |
- % |
- \global\let\section = \appendixsec |
- \global\let\subsection = \appendixsubsec |
- \global\let\subsubsection = \appendixsubsubsec |
-} |
- |
-\outer\parseargdef\unnumbered{\unnmhead0{#1}} % normally unnmhead0 calls unnumberedzzz |
-\def\unnumberedzzz#1{% |
- \global\secno=0 \global\subsecno=0 \global\subsubsecno=0 |
- \global\advance\unnumberedno by 1 |
- % |
- % Since an unnumbered has no number, no prefix for figures. |
- \global\let\chaplevelprefix = \empty |
- \resetallfloatnos |
- % |
- % This used to be simply \message{#1}, but TeX fully expands the |
- % argument to \message. Therefore, if #1 contained @-commands, TeX |
- % expanded them. For example, in `@unnumbered The @cite{Book}', TeX |
- % expanded @cite (which turns out to cause errors because \cite is meant |
- % to be executed, not expanded). |
- % |
- % Anyway, we don't want the fully-expanded definition of @cite to appear |
- % as a result of the \message, we just want `@cite' itself. We use |
- % \the<toks register> to achieve this: TeX expands \the<toks> only once, |
- % simply yielding the contents of <toks register>. (We also do this for |
- % the toc entries.) |
- \toks0 = {#1}% |
- \message{(\the\toks0)}% |
- % |
- \chapmacro{#1}{Ynothing}{\the\unnumberedno}% |
- % |
- \global\let\section = \unnumberedsec |
- \global\let\subsection = \unnumberedsubsec |
- \global\let\subsubsection = \unnumberedsubsubsec |
-} |
- |
-% @centerchap is like @unnumbered, but the heading is centered. |
-\outer\parseargdef\centerchap{% |
- % Well, we could do the following in a group, but that would break |
- % an assumption that \chapmacro is called at the outermost level. |
- % Thus we are safer this way: --kasal, 24feb04 |
- \let\centerparametersmaybe = \centerparameters |
- \unnmhead0{#1}% |
- \let\centerparametersmaybe = \relax |
-} |
- |
-% @top is like @unnumbered. |
-\let\top\unnumbered |
- |
-% Sections. |
-\outer\parseargdef\numberedsec{\numhead1{#1}} % normally calls seczzz |
-\def\seczzz#1{% |
- \global\subsecno=0 \global\subsubsecno=0 \global\advance\secno by 1 |
- \sectionheading{#1}{sec}{Ynumbered}{\the\chapno.\the\secno}% |
-} |
- |
-\outer\parseargdef\appendixsection{\apphead1{#1}} % normally calls appendixsectionzzz |
-\def\appendixsectionzzz#1{% |
- \global\subsecno=0 \global\subsubsecno=0 \global\advance\secno by 1 |
- \sectionheading{#1}{sec}{Yappendix}{\appendixletter.\the\secno}% |
-} |
-\let\appendixsec\appendixsection |
- |
-\outer\parseargdef\unnumberedsec{\unnmhead1{#1}} % normally calls unnumberedseczzz |
-\def\unnumberedseczzz#1{% |
- \global\subsecno=0 \global\subsubsecno=0 \global\advance\secno by 1 |
- \sectionheading{#1}{sec}{Ynothing}{\the\unnumberedno.\the\secno}% |
-} |
- |
-% Subsections. |
-\outer\parseargdef\numberedsubsec{\numhead2{#1}} % normally calls numberedsubseczzz |
-\def\numberedsubseczzz#1{% |
- \global\subsubsecno=0 \global\advance\subsecno by 1 |
- \sectionheading{#1}{subsec}{Ynumbered}{\the\chapno.\the\secno.\the\subsecno}% |
-} |
- |
-\outer\parseargdef\appendixsubsec{\apphead2{#1}} % normally calls appendixsubseczzz |
-\def\appendixsubseczzz#1{% |
- \global\subsubsecno=0 \global\advance\subsecno by 1 |
- \sectionheading{#1}{subsec}{Yappendix}% |
- {\appendixletter.\the\secno.\the\subsecno}% |
-} |
- |
-\outer\parseargdef\unnumberedsubsec{\unnmhead2{#1}} %normally calls unnumberedsubseczzz |
-\def\unnumberedsubseczzz#1{% |
- \global\subsubsecno=0 \global\advance\subsecno by 1 |
- \sectionheading{#1}{subsec}{Ynothing}% |
- {\the\unnumberedno.\the\secno.\the\subsecno}% |
-} |
- |
-% Subsubsections. |
-\outer\parseargdef\numberedsubsubsec{\numhead3{#1}} % normally numberedsubsubseczzz |
-\def\numberedsubsubseczzz#1{% |
- \global\advance\subsubsecno by 1 |
- \sectionheading{#1}{subsubsec}{Ynumbered}% |
- {\the\chapno.\the\secno.\the\subsecno.\the\subsubsecno}% |
-} |
- |
-\outer\parseargdef\appendixsubsubsec{\apphead3{#1}} % normally appendixsubsubseczzz |
-\def\appendixsubsubseczzz#1{% |
- \global\advance\subsubsecno by 1 |
- \sectionheading{#1}{subsubsec}{Yappendix}% |
- {\appendixletter.\the\secno.\the\subsecno.\the\subsubsecno}% |
-} |
- |
-\outer\parseargdef\unnumberedsubsubsec{\unnmhead3{#1}} %normally unnumberedsubsubseczzz |
-\def\unnumberedsubsubseczzz#1{% |
- \global\advance\subsubsecno by 1 |
- \sectionheading{#1}{subsubsec}{Ynothing}% |
- {\the\unnumberedno.\the\secno.\the\subsecno.\the\subsubsecno}% |
-} |
- |
-% These macros control what the section commands do, according |
-% to what kind of chapter we are in (ordinary, appendix, or unnumbered). |
-% Define them by default for a numbered chapter. |
-\let\section = \numberedsec |
-\let\subsection = \numberedsubsec |
-\let\subsubsection = \numberedsubsubsec |
- |
-% Define @majorheading, @heading and @subheading |
- |
-% NOTE on use of \vbox for chapter headings, section headings, and such: |
-% 1) We use \vbox rather than the earlier \line to permit |
-% overlong headings to fold. |
-% 2) \hyphenpenalty is set to 10000 because hyphenation in a |
-% heading is obnoxious; this forbids it. |
-% 3) Likewise, headings look best if no \parindent is used, and |
-% if justification is not attempted. Hence \raggedright. |
- |
- |
-\def\majorheading{% |
- {\advance\chapheadingskip by 10pt \chapbreak }% |
- \parsearg\chapheadingzzz |
-} |
- |
-\def\chapheading{\chapbreak \parsearg\chapheadingzzz} |
-\def\chapheadingzzz#1{% |
- {\chapfonts \vbox{\hyphenpenalty=10000\tolerance=5000 |
- \parindent=0pt\raggedright |
- \rm #1\hfill}}% |
- \bigskip \par\penalty 200\relax |
- \suppressfirstparagraphindent |
-} |
- |
-% @heading, @subheading, @subsubheading. |
-\parseargdef\heading{\sectionheading{#1}{sec}{Yomitfromtoc}{} |
- \suppressfirstparagraphindent} |
-\parseargdef\subheading{\sectionheading{#1}{subsec}{Yomitfromtoc}{} |
- \suppressfirstparagraphindent} |
-\parseargdef\subsubheading{\sectionheading{#1}{subsubsec}{Yomitfromtoc}{} |
- \suppressfirstparagraphindent} |
- |
-% These macros generate a chapter, section, etc. heading only |
-% (including whitespace, linebreaking, etc. around it), |
-% given all the information in convenient, parsed form. |
- |
-%%% Args are the skip and penalty (usually negative) |
-\def\dobreak#1#2{\par\ifdim\lastskip<#1\removelastskip\penalty#2\vskip#1\fi} |
- |
-%%% Define plain chapter starts, and page on/off switching for it |
-% Parameter controlling skip before chapter headings (if needed) |
- |
-\newskip\chapheadingskip |
- |
-\def\chapbreak{\dobreak \chapheadingskip {-4000}} |
-\def\chappager{\par\vfill\supereject} |
-% Because \domark is called before \chapoddpage, the filler page will |
-% get the headings for the next chapter, which is wrong. But we don't |
-% care -- we just disable all headings on the filler page. |
-\def\chapoddpage{% |
- \chappager |
- \ifodd\pageno \else |
- \begingroup |
- \evenheadline={\hfil}\evenfootline={\hfil}% |
- \oddheadline={\hfil}\oddfootline={\hfil}% |
- \hbox to 0pt{}% |
- \chappager |
- \endgroup |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-\def\setchapternewpage #1 {\csname CHAPPAG#1\endcsname} |
- |
-\def\CHAPPAGoff{% |
-\global\let\contentsalignmacro = \chappager |
-\global\let\pchapsepmacro=\chapbreak |
-\global\let\pagealignmacro=\chappager} |
- |
-\def\CHAPPAGon{% |
-\global\let\contentsalignmacro = \chappager |
-\global\let\pchapsepmacro=\chappager |
-\global\let\pagealignmacro=\chappager |
-\global\def\HEADINGSon{\HEADINGSsingle}} |
- |
-\def\CHAPPAGodd{% |
-\global\let\contentsalignmacro = \chapoddpage |
-\global\let\pchapsepmacro=\chapoddpage |
-\global\let\pagealignmacro=\chapoddpage |
-\global\def\HEADINGSon{\HEADINGSdouble}} |
- |
-\CHAPPAGon |
- |
-% Chapter opening. |
-% |
-% #1 is the text, #2 is the section type (Ynumbered, Ynothing, |
-% Yappendix, Yomitfromtoc), #3 the chapter number. |
-% |
-% To test against our argument. |
-\def\Ynothingkeyword{Ynothing} |
-\def\Yomitfromtockeyword{Yomitfromtoc} |
-\def\Yappendixkeyword{Yappendix} |
-% |
-\def\chapmacro#1#2#3{% |
- % Insert the first mark before the heading break (see notes for \domark). |
- \let\prevchapterdefs=\lastchapterdefs |
- \let\prevsectiondefs=\lastsectiondefs |
- \gdef\lastsectiondefs{\gdef\thissectionname{}\gdef\thissectionnum{}% |
- \gdef\thissection{}}% |
- % |
- \def\temptype{#2}% |
- \ifx\temptype\Ynothingkeyword |
- \gdef\lastchapterdefs{\gdef\thischaptername{#1}\gdef\thischapternum{}% |
- \gdef\thischapter{\thischaptername}}% |
- \else\ifx\temptype\Yomitfromtockeyword |
- \gdef\lastchapterdefs{\gdef\thischaptername{#1}\gdef\thischapternum{}% |
- \gdef\thischapter{}}% |
- \else\ifx\temptype\Yappendixkeyword |
- \toks0={#1}% |
- \xdef\lastchapterdefs{% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thischaptername{\the\toks0}% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thischapternum{\appendixletter}% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thischapter{\putwordAppendix{} \noexpand\thischapternum: |
- \noexpand\thischaptername}% |
- }% |
- \else |
- \toks0={#1}% |
- \xdef\lastchapterdefs{% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thischaptername{\the\toks0}% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thischapternum{\the\chapno}% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thischapter{\putwordChapter{} \noexpand\thischapternum: |
- \noexpand\thischaptername}% |
- }% |
- \fi\fi\fi |
- % |
- % Output the mark. Pass it through \safewhatsit, to take care of |
- % the preceding space. |
- \safewhatsit\domark |
- % |
- % Insert the chapter heading break. |
- \pchapsepmacro |
- % |
- % Now the second mark, after the heading break. No break points |
- % between here and the heading. |
- \let\prevchapterdefs=\lastchapterdefs |
- \let\prevsectiondefs=\lastsectiondefs |
- \domark |
- % |
- {% |
- \chapfonts \rm |
- % |
- % Have to define \lastsection before calling \donoderef, because the |
- % xref code eventually uses it. On the other hand, it has to be called |
- % after \pchapsepmacro, or the headline will change too soon. |
- \gdef\lastsection{#1}% |
- % |
- % Only insert the separating space if we have a chapter/appendix |
- % number, and don't print the unnumbered ``number''. |
- \ifx\temptype\Ynothingkeyword |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{}% |
- \def\toctype{unnchap}% |
- \else\ifx\temptype\Yomitfromtockeyword |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{}% contents like unnumbered, but no toc entry |
- \def\toctype{omit}% |
- \else\ifx\temptype\Yappendixkeyword |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{\putwordAppendix{} #3\enspace}% |
- \def\toctype{app}% |
- \else |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{#3\enspace}% |
- \def\toctype{numchap}% |
- \fi\fi\fi |
- % |
- % Write the toc entry for this chapter. Must come before the |
- % \donoderef, because we include the current node name in the toc |
- % entry, and \donoderef resets it to empty. |
- \writetocentry{\toctype}{#1}{#3}% |
- % |
- % For pdftex, we have to write out the node definition (aka, make |
- % the pdfdest) after any page break, but before the actual text has |
- % been typeset. If the destination for the pdf outline is after the |
- % text, then jumping from the outline may wind up with the text not |
- % being visible, for instance under high magnification. |
- \donoderef{#2}% |
- % |
- % Typeset the actual heading. |
- \nobreak % Avoid page breaks at the interline glue. |
- \vbox{\hyphenpenalty=10000 \tolerance=5000 \parindent=0pt \raggedright |
- \hangindent=\wd0 \centerparametersmaybe |
- \unhbox0 #1\par}% |
- }% |
- \nobreak\bigskip % no page break after a chapter title |
- \nobreak |
-} |
- |
-% @centerchap -- centered and unnumbered. |
-\let\centerparametersmaybe = \relax |
-\def\centerparameters{% |
- \advance\rightskip by 3\rightskip |
- \leftskip = \rightskip |
- \parfillskip = 0pt |
-} |
- |
- |
-% I don't think this chapter style is supported any more, so I'm not |
-% updating it with the new noderef stuff. We'll see. --karl, 11aug03. |
-% |
-\def\setchapterstyle #1 {\csname CHAPF#1\endcsname} |
-% |
-\def\unnchfopen #1{% |
-\chapoddpage {\chapfonts \vbox{\hyphenpenalty=10000\tolerance=5000 |
- \parindent=0pt\raggedright |
- \rm #1\hfill}}\bigskip \par\nobreak |
-} |
-\def\chfopen #1#2{\chapoddpage {\chapfonts |
-\vbox to 3in{\vfil \hbox to\hsize{\hfil #2} \hbox to\hsize{\hfil #1} \vfil}}% |
-\par\penalty 5000 % |
-} |
-\def\centerchfopen #1{% |
-\chapoddpage {\chapfonts \vbox{\hyphenpenalty=10000\tolerance=5000 |
- \parindent=0pt |
- \hfill {\rm #1}\hfill}}\bigskip \par\nobreak |
-} |
-\def\CHAPFopen{% |
- \global\let\chapmacro=\chfopen |
- \global\let\centerchapmacro=\centerchfopen} |
- |
- |
-% Section titles. These macros combine the section number parts and |
-% call the generic \sectionheading to do the printing. |
-% |
-\newskip\secheadingskip |
-\def\secheadingbreak{\dobreak \secheadingskip{-1000}} |
- |
-% Subsection titles. |
-\newskip\subsecheadingskip |
-\def\subsecheadingbreak{\dobreak \subsecheadingskip{-500}} |
- |
-% Subsubsection titles. |
-\def\subsubsecheadingskip{\subsecheadingskip} |
-\def\subsubsecheadingbreak{\subsecheadingbreak} |
- |
- |
-% Print any size, any type, section title. |
-% |
-% #1 is the text, #2 is the section level (sec/subsec/subsubsec), #3 is |
-% the section type for xrefs (Ynumbered, Ynothing, Yappendix), #4 is the |
-% section number. |
-% |
-\def\seckeyword{sec} |
-% |
-\def\sectionheading#1#2#3#4{% |
- {% |
- % Switch to the right set of fonts. |
- \csname #2fonts\endcsname \rm |
- % |
- \def\sectionlevel{#2}% |
- \def\temptype{#3}% |
- % |
- % Insert first mark before the heading break (see notes for \domark). |
- \let\prevsectiondefs=\lastsectiondefs |
- \ifx\temptype\Ynothingkeyword |
- \ifx\sectionlevel\seckeyword |
- \gdef\lastsectiondefs{\gdef\thissectionname{#1}\gdef\thissectionnum{}% |
- \gdef\thissection{\thissectionname}}% |
- \fi |
- \else\ifx\temptype\Yomitfromtockeyword |
- % Don't redefine \thissection. |
- \else\ifx\temptype\Yappendixkeyword |
- \ifx\sectionlevel\seckeyword |
- \toks0={#1}% |
- \xdef\lastsectiondefs{% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thissectionname{\the\toks0}% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thissectionnum{#4}% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thissection{\putwordSection{} \noexpand\thissectionnum: |
- \noexpand\thissectionname}% |
- }% |
- \fi |
- \else |
- \ifx\sectionlevel\seckeyword |
- \toks0={#1}% |
- \xdef\lastsectiondefs{% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thissectionname{\the\toks0}% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thissectionnum{#4}% |
- \gdef\noexpand\thissection{\putwordSection{} \noexpand\thissectionnum: |
- \noexpand\thissectionname}% |
- }% |
- \fi |
- \fi\fi\fi |
- % |
- % Output the mark. Pass it through \safewhatsit, to take care of |
- % the preceding space. |
- \safewhatsit\domark |
- % |
- % Insert space above the heading. |
- \csname #2headingbreak\endcsname |
- % |
- % Now the second mark, after the heading break. No break points |
- % between here and the heading. |
- \let\prevsectiondefs=\lastsectiondefs |
- \domark |
- % |
- % Only insert the space after the number if we have a section number. |
- \ifx\temptype\Ynothingkeyword |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{}% |
- \def\toctype{unn}% |
- \gdef\lastsection{#1}% |
- \else\ifx\temptype\Yomitfromtockeyword |
- % for @headings -- no section number, don't include in toc, |
- % and don't redefine \lastsection. |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{}% |
- \def\toctype{omit}% |
- \let\sectionlevel=\empty |
- \else\ifx\temptype\Yappendixkeyword |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{#4\enspace}% |
- \def\toctype{app}% |
- \gdef\lastsection{#1}% |
- \else |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{#4\enspace}% |
- \def\toctype{num}% |
- \gdef\lastsection{#1}% |
- \fi\fi\fi |
- % |
- % Write the toc entry (before \donoderef). See comments in \chapmacro. |
- \writetocentry{\toctype\sectionlevel}{#1}{#4}% |
- % |
- % Write the node reference (= pdf destination for pdftex). |
- % Again, see comments in \chapmacro. |
- \donoderef{#3}% |
- % |
- % Interline glue will be inserted when the vbox is completed. |
- % That glue will be a valid breakpoint for the page, since it'll be |
- % preceded by a whatsit (usually from the \donoderef, or from the |
- % \writetocentry if there was no node). We don't want to allow that |
- % break, since then the whatsits could end up on page n while the |
- % section is on page n+1, thus toc/etc. are wrong. Debian bug 276000. |
- \nobreak |
- % |
- % Output the actual section heading. |
- \vbox{\hyphenpenalty=10000 \tolerance=5000 \parindent=0pt \raggedright |
- \hangindent=\wd0 % zero if no section number |
- \unhbox0 #1}% |
- }% |
- % Add extra space after the heading -- half of whatever came above it. |
- % Don't allow stretch, though. |
- \kern .5 \csname #2headingskip\endcsname |
- % |
- % Do not let the kern be a potential breakpoint, as it would be if it |
- % was followed by glue. |
- \nobreak |
- % |
- % We'll almost certainly start a paragraph next, so don't let that |
- % glue accumulate. (Not a breakpoint because it's preceded by a |
- % discardable item.) |
- \vskip-\parskip |
- % |
- % This is purely so the last item on the list is a known \penalty > |
- % 10000. This is so \startdefun can avoid allowing breakpoints after |
- % section headings. Otherwise, it would insert a valid breakpoint between: |
- % |
- % @section sec-whatever |
- % @deffn def-whatever |
- \penalty 10001 |
-} |
- |
- |
-\message{toc,} |
-% Table of contents. |
-\newwrite\tocfile |
- |
-% Write an entry to the toc file, opening it if necessary. |
-% Called from @chapter, etc. |
-% |
-% Example usage: \writetocentry{sec}{Section Name}{\the\chapno.\the\secno} |
-% We append the current node name (if any) and page number as additional |
-% arguments for the \{chap,sec,...}entry macros which will eventually |
-% read this. The node name is used in the pdf outlines as the |
-% destination to jump to. |
-% |
-% We open the .toc file for writing here instead of at @setfilename (or |
-% any other fixed time) so that @contents can be anywhere in the document. |
-% But if #1 is `omit', then we don't do anything. This is used for the |
-% table of contents chapter openings themselves. |
-% |
-\newif\iftocfileopened |
-\def\omitkeyword{omit}% |
-% |
-\def\writetocentry#1#2#3{% |
- \edef\writetoctype{#1}% |
- \ifx\writetoctype\omitkeyword \else |
- \iftocfileopened\else |
- \immediate\openout\tocfile = \jobname.toc |
- \global\tocfileopenedtrue |
- \fi |
- % |
- \iflinks |
- {\atdummies |
- \edef\temp{% |
- \write\tocfile{@#1entry{#2}{#3}{\lastnode}{\noexpand\folio}}}% |
- \temp |
- }% |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- % |
- % Tell \shipout to create a pdf destination on each page, if we're |
- % writing pdf. These are used in the table of contents. We can't |
- % just write one on every page because the title pages are numbered |
- % 1 and 2 (the page numbers aren't printed), and so are the first |
- % two pages of the document. Thus, we'd have two destinations named |
- % `1', and two named `2'. |
- \ifpdf \global\pdfmakepagedesttrue \fi |
-} |
- |
- |
-% These characters do not print properly in the Computer Modern roman |
-% fonts, so we must take special care. This is more or less redundant |
-% with the Texinfo input format setup at the end of this file. |
-% |
-\def\activecatcodes{% |
- \catcode`\"=\active |
- \catcode`\$=\active |
- \catcode`\<=\active |
- \catcode`\>=\active |
- \catcode`\\=\active |
- \catcode`\^=\active |
- \catcode`\_=\active |
- \catcode`\|=\active |
- \catcode`\~=\active |
-} |
- |
- |
-% Read the toc file, which is essentially Texinfo input. |
-\def\readtocfile{% |
- \setupdatafile |
- \activecatcodes |
- \input \tocreadfilename |
-} |
- |
-\newskip\contentsrightmargin \contentsrightmargin=1in |
-\newcount\savepageno |
-\newcount\lastnegativepageno \lastnegativepageno = -1 |
- |
-% Prepare to read what we've written to \tocfile. |
-% |
-\def\startcontents#1{% |
- % If @setchapternewpage on, and @headings double, the contents should |
- % start on an odd page, unlike chapters. Thus, we maintain |
- % \contentsalignmacro in parallel with \pagealignmacro. |
- % From: Torbjorn Granlund <tege@matematik.su.se> |
- \contentsalignmacro |
- \immediate\closeout\tocfile |
- % |
- % Don't need to put `Contents' or `Short Contents' in the headline. |
- % It is abundantly clear what they are. |
- \chapmacro{#1}{Yomitfromtoc}{}% |
- % |
- \savepageno = \pageno |
- \begingroup % Set up to handle contents files properly. |
- \raggedbottom % Worry more about breakpoints than the bottom. |
- \advance\hsize by -\contentsrightmargin % Don't use the full line length. |
- % |
- % Roman numerals for page numbers. |
- \ifnum \pageno>0 \global\pageno = \lastnegativepageno \fi |
-} |
- |
-% redefined for the two-volume lispref. We always output on |
-% \jobname.toc even if this is redefined. |
-% |
-\def\tocreadfilename{\jobname.toc} |
- |
-% Normal (long) toc. |
-% |
-\def\contents{% |
- \startcontents{\putwordTOC}% |
- \openin 1 \tocreadfilename\space |
- \ifeof 1 \else |
- \readtocfile |
- \fi |
- \vfill \eject |
- \contentsalignmacro % in case @setchapternewpage odd is in effect |
- \ifeof 1 \else |
- \pdfmakeoutlines |
- \fi |
- \closein 1 |
- \endgroup |
- \lastnegativepageno = \pageno |
- \global\pageno = \savepageno |
-} |
- |
-% And just the chapters. |
-\def\summarycontents{% |
- \startcontents{\putwordShortTOC}% |
- % |
- \let\numchapentry = \shortchapentry |
- \let\appentry = \shortchapentry |
- \let\unnchapentry = \shortunnchapentry |
- % We want a true roman here for the page numbers. |
- \secfonts |
- \let\rm=\shortcontrm \let\bf=\shortcontbf |
- \let\sl=\shortcontsl \let\tt=\shortconttt |
- \rm |
- \hyphenpenalty = 10000 |
- \advance\baselineskip by 1pt % Open it up a little. |
- \def\numsecentry##1##2##3##4{} |
- \let\appsecentry = \numsecentry |
- \let\unnsecentry = \numsecentry |
- \let\numsubsecentry = \numsecentry |
- \let\appsubsecentry = \numsecentry |
- \let\unnsubsecentry = \numsecentry |
- \let\numsubsubsecentry = \numsecentry |
- \let\appsubsubsecentry = \numsecentry |
- \let\unnsubsubsecentry = \numsecentry |
- \openin 1 \tocreadfilename\space |
- \ifeof 1 \else |
- \readtocfile |
- \fi |
- \closein 1 |
- \vfill \eject |
- \contentsalignmacro % in case @setchapternewpage odd is in effect |
- \endgroup |
- \lastnegativepageno = \pageno |
- \global\pageno = \savepageno |
-} |
-\let\shortcontents = \summarycontents |
- |
-% Typeset the label for a chapter or appendix for the short contents. |
-% The arg is, e.g., `A' for an appendix, or `3' for a chapter. |
-% |
-\def\shortchaplabel#1{% |
- % This space should be enough, since a single number is .5em, and the |
- % widest letter (M) is 1em, at least in the Computer Modern fonts. |
- % But use \hss just in case. |
- % (This space doesn't include the extra space that gets added after |
- % the label; that gets put in by \shortchapentry above.) |
- % |
- % We'd like to right-justify chapter numbers, but that looks strange |
- % with appendix letters. And right-justifying numbers and |
- % left-justifying letters looks strange when there is less than 10 |
- % chapters. Have to read the whole toc once to know how many chapters |
- % there are before deciding ... |
- \hbox to 1em{#1\hss}% |
-} |
- |
-% These macros generate individual entries in the table of contents. |
-% The first argument is the chapter or section name. |
-% The last argument is the page number. |
-% The arguments in between are the chapter number, section number, ... |
- |
-% Chapters, in the main contents. |
-\def\numchapentry#1#2#3#4{\dochapentry{#2\labelspace#1}{#4}} |
-% |
-% Chapters, in the short toc. |
-% See comments in \dochapentry re vbox and related settings. |
-\def\shortchapentry#1#2#3#4{% |
- \tocentry{\shortchaplabel{#2}\labelspace #1}{\doshortpageno\bgroup#4\egroup}% |
-} |
- |
-% Appendices, in the main contents. |
-% Need the word Appendix, and a fixed-size box. |
-% |
-\def\appendixbox#1{% |
- % We use M since it's probably the widest letter. |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{\putwordAppendix{} M}% |
- \hbox to \wd0{\putwordAppendix{} #1\hss}} |
-% |
-\def\appentry#1#2#3#4{\dochapentry{\appendixbox{#2}\labelspace#1}{#4}} |
- |
-% Unnumbered chapters. |
-\def\unnchapentry#1#2#3#4{\dochapentry{#1}{#4}} |
-\def\shortunnchapentry#1#2#3#4{\tocentry{#1}{\doshortpageno\bgroup#4\egroup}} |
- |
-% Sections. |
-\def\numsecentry#1#2#3#4{\dosecentry{#2\labelspace#1}{#4}} |
-\let\appsecentry=\numsecentry |
-\def\unnsecentry#1#2#3#4{\dosecentry{#1}{#4}} |
- |
-% Subsections. |
-\def\numsubsecentry#1#2#3#4{\dosubsecentry{#2\labelspace#1}{#4}} |
-\let\appsubsecentry=\numsubsecentry |
-\def\unnsubsecentry#1#2#3#4{\dosubsecentry{#1}{#4}} |
- |
-% And subsubsections. |
-\def\numsubsubsecentry#1#2#3#4{\dosubsubsecentry{#2\labelspace#1}{#4}} |
-\let\appsubsubsecentry=\numsubsubsecentry |
-\def\unnsubsubsecentry#1#2#3#4{\dosubsubsecentry{#1}{#4}} |
- |
-% This parameter controls the indentation of the various levels. |
-% Same as \defaultparindent. |
-\newdimen\tocindent \tocindent = 15pt |
- |
-% Now for the actual typesetting. In all these, #1 is the text and #2 is the |
-% page number. |
-% |
-% If the toc has to be broken over pages, we want it to be at chapters |
-% if at all possible; hence the \penalty. |
-\def\dochapentry#1#2{% |
- \penalty-300 \vskip1\baselineskip plus.33\baselineskip minus.25\baselineskip |
- \begingroup |
- \chapentryfonts |
- \tocentry{#1}{\dopageno\bgroup#2\egroup}% |
- \endgroup |
- \nobreak\vskip .25\baselineskip plus.1\baselineskip |
-} |
- |
-\def\dosecentry#1#2{\begingroup |
- \secentryfonts \leftskip=\tocindent |
- \tocentry{#1}{\dopageno\bgroup#2\egroup}% |
-\endgroup} |
- |
-\def\dosubsecentry#1#2{\begingroup |
- \subsecentryfonts \leftskip=2\tocindent |
- \tocentry{#1}{\dopageno\bgroup#2\egroup}% |
-\endgroup} |
- |
-\def\dosubsubsecentry#1#2{\begingroup |
- \subsubsecentryfonts \leftskip=3\tocindent |
- \tocentry{#1}{\dopageno\bgroup#2\egroup}% |
-\endgroup} |
- |
-% We use the same \entry macro as for the index entries. |
-\let\tocentry = \entry |
- |
-% Space between chapter (or whatever) number and the title. |
-\def\labelspace{\hskip1em \relax} |
- |
-\def\dopageno#1{{\rm #1}} |
-\def\doshortpageno#1{{\rm #1}} |
- |
-\def\chapentryfonts{\secfonts \rm} |
-\def\secentryfonts{\textfonts} |
-\def\subsecentryfonts{\textfonts} |
-\def\subsubsecentryfonts{\textfonts} |
- |
- |
-\message{environments,} |
-% @foo ... @end foo. |
- |
-% @point{}, @result{}, @expansion{}, @print{}, @equiv{}. |
-% |
-% Since these characters are used in examples, they should be an even number of |
-% \tt widths. Each \tt character is 1en, so two makes it 1em. |
-% |
-\def\point{$\star$} |
-\def\arrow{\leavevmode\raise.05ex\hbox to 1em{\hfil$\rightarrow$\hfil}} |
-\def\result{\leavevmode\raise.05ex\hbox to 1em{\hfil$\Rightarrow$\hfil}} |
-\def\expansion{\leavevmode\hbox to 1em{\hfil$\mapsto$\hfil}} |
-\def\print{\leavevmode\lower.1ex\hbox to 1em{\hfil$\dashv$\hfil}} |
-\def\equiv{\leavevmode\hbox to 1em{\hfil$\ptexequiv$\hfil}} |
- |
-% The @error{} command. |
-% Adapted from the TeXbook's \boxit. |
-% |
-\newbox\errorbox |
-% |
-{\tentt \global\dimen0 = 3em}% Width of the box. |
-\dimen2 = .55pt % Thickness of rules |
-% The text. (`r' is open on the right, `e' somewhat less so on the left.) |
-\setbox0 = \hbox{\kern-.75pt \reducedsf error\kern-1.5pt} |
-% |
-\setbox\errorbox=\hbox to \dimen0{\hfil |
- \hsize = \dimen0 \advance\hsize by -5.8pt % Space to left+right. |
- \advance\hsize by -2\dimen2 % Rules. |
- \vbox{% |
- \hrule height\dimen2 |
- \hbox{\vrule width\dimen2 \kern3pt % Space to left of text. |
- \vtop{\kern2.4pt \box0 \kern2.4pt}% Space above/below. |
- \kern3pt\vrule width\dimen2}% Space to right. |
- \hrule height\dimen2} |
- \hfil} |
-% |
-\def\error{\leavevmode\lower.7ex\copy\errorbox} |
- |
-% @tex ... @end tex escapes into raw Tex temporarily. |
-% One exception: @ is still an escape character, so that @end tex works. |
-% But \@ or @@ will get a plain tex @ character. |
- |
-\envdef\tex{% |
- \catcode `\\=0 \catcode `\{=1 \catcode `\}=2 |
- \catcode `\$=3 \catcode `\&=4 \catcode `\#=6 |
- \catcode `\^=7 \catcode `\_=8 \catcode `\~=\active \let~=\tie |
- \catcode `\%=14 |
- \catcode `\+=\other |
- \catcode `\"=\other |
- \catcode `\|=\other |
- \catcode `\<=\other |
- \catcode `\>=\other |
- \escapechar=`\\ |
- % |
- \let\b=\ptexb |
- \let\bullet=\ptexbullet |
- \let\c=\ptexc |
- \let\,=\ptexcomma |
- \let\.=\ptexdot |
- \let\dots=\ptexdots |
- \let\equiv=\ptexequiv |
- \let\!=\ptexexclam |
- \let\i=\ptexi |
- \let\indent=\ptexindent |
- \let\noindent=\ptexnoindent |
- \let\{=\ptexlbrace |
- \let\+=\tabalign |
- \let\}=\ptexrbrace |
- \let\/=\ptexslash |
- \let\*=\ptexstar |
- \let\t=\ptext |
- \expandafter \let\csname top\endcsname=\ptextop % outer |
- \let\frenchspacing=\plainfrenchspacing |
- % |
- \def\endldots{\mathinner{\ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots}}% |
- \def\enddots{\relax\ifmmode\endldots\else$\mathsurround=0pt \endldots\,$\fi}% |
- \def\@{@}% |
-} |
-% There is no need to define \Etex. |
- |
-% Define @lisp ... @end lisp. |
-% @lisp environment forms a group so it can rebind things, |
-% including the definition of @end lisp (which normally is erroneous). |
- |
-% Amount to narrow the margins by for @lisp. |
-\newskip\lispnarrowing \lispnarrowing=0.4in |
- |
-% This is the definition that ^^M gets inside @lisp, @example, and other |
-% such environments. \null is better than a space, since it doesn't |
-% have any width. |
-\def\lisppar{\null\endgraf} |
- |
-% This space is always present above and below environments. |
-\newskip\envskipamount \envskipamount = 0pt |
- |
-% Make spacing and below environment symmetrical. We use \parskip here |
-% to help in doing that, since in @example-like environments \parskip |
-% is reset to zero; thus the \afterenvbreak inserts no space -- but the |
-% start of the next paragraph will insert \parskip. |
-% |
-\def\aboveenvbreak{{% |
- % =10000 instead of <10000 because of a special case in \itemzzz and |
- % \sectionheading, q.v. |
- \ifnum \lastpenalty=10000 \else |
- \advance\envskipamount by \parskip |
- \endgraf |
- \ifdim\lastskip<\envskipamount |
- \removelastskip |
- % it's not a good place to break if the last penalty was \nobreak |
- % or better ... |
- \ifnum\lastpenalty<10000 \penalty-50 \fi |
- \vskip\envskipamount |
- \fi |
- \fi |
-}} |
- |
-\let\afterenvbreak = \aboveenvbreak |
- |
-% \nonarrowing is a flag. If "set", @lisp etc don't narrow margins; it will |
-% also clear it, so that its embedded environments do the narrowing again. |
-\let\nonarrowing=\relax |
- |
-% @cartouche ... @end cartouche: draw rectangle w/rounded corners around |
-% environment contents. |
-\font\circle=lcircle10 |
-\newdimen\circthick |
-\newdimen\cartouter\newdimen\cartinner |
-\newskip\normbskip\newskip\normpskip\newskip\normlskip |
-\circthick=\fontdimen8\circle |
-% |
-\def\ctl{{\circle\char'013\hskip -6pt}}% 6pt from pl file: 1/2charwidth |
-\def\ctr{{\hskip 6pt\circle\char'010}} |
-\def\cbl{{\circle\char'012\hskip -6pt}} |
-\def\cbr{{\hskip 6pt\circle\char'011}} |
-\def\carttop{\hbox to \cartouter{\hskip\lskip |
- \ctl\leaders\hrule height\circthick\hfil\ctr |
- \hskip\rskip}} |
-\def\cartbot{\hbox to \cartouter{\hskip\lskip |
- \cbl\leaders\hrule height\circthick\hfil\cbr |
- \hskip\rskip}} |
-% |
-\newskip\lskip\newskip\rskip |
- |
-\envdef\cartouche{% |
- \ifhmode\par\fi % can't be in the midst of a paragraph. |
- \startsavinginserts |
- \lskip=\leftskip \rskip=\rightskip |
- \leftskip=0pt\rightskip=0pt % we want these *outside*. |
- \cartinner=\hsize \advance\cartinner by-\lskip |
- \advance\cartinner by-\rskip |
- \cartouter=\hsize |
- \advance\cartouter by 18.4pt % allow for 3pt kerns on either |
- % side, and for 6pt waste from |
- % each corner char, and rule thickness |
- \normbskip=\baselineskip \normpskip=\parskip \normlskip=\lineskip |
- % Flag to tell @lisp, etc., not to narrow margin. |
- \let\nonarrowing = t% |
- \vbox\bgroup |
- \baselineskip=0pt\parskip=0pt\lineskip=0pt |
- \carttop |
- \hbox\bgroup |
- \hskip\lskip |
- \vrule\kern3pt |
- \vbox\bgroup |
- \kern3pt |
- \hsize=\cartinner |
- \baselineskip=\normbskip |
- \lineskip=\normlskip |
- \parskip=\normpskip |
- \vskip -\parskip |
- \comment % For explanation, see the end of \def\group. |
-} |
-\def\Ecartouche{% |
- \ifhmode\par\fi |
- \kern3pt |
- \egroup |
- \kern3pt\vrule |
- \hskip\rskip |
- \egroup |
- \cartbot |
- \egroup |
- \checkinserts |
-} |
- |
- |
-% This macro is called at the beginning of all the @example variants, |
-% inside a group. |
-\def\nonfillstart{% |
- \aboveenvbreak |
- \hfuzz = 12pt % Don't be fussy |
- \sepspaces % Make spaces be word-separators rather than space tokens. |
- \let\par = \lisppar % don't ignore blank lines |
- \obeylines % each line of input is a line of output |
- \parskip = 0pt |
- \parindent = 0pt |
- \emergencystretch = 0pt % don't try to avoid overfull boxes |
- \ifx\nonarrowing\relax |
- \advance \leftskip by \lispnarrowing |
- \exdentamount=\lispnarrowing |
- \else |
- \let\nonarrowing = \relax |
- \fi |
- \let\exdent=\nofillexdent |
-} |
- |
-% If you want all examples etc. small: @set dispenvsize small. |
-% If you want even small examples the full size: @set dispenvsize nosmall. |
-% This affects the following displayed environments: |
-% @example, @display, @format, @lisp |
-% |
-\def\smallword{small} |
-\def\nosmallword{nosmall} |
-\let\SETdispenvsize\relax |
-\def\setnormaldispenv{% |
- \ifx\SETdispenvsize\smallword |
- % end paragraph for sake of leading, in case document has no blank |
- % line. This is redundant with what happens in \aboveenvbreak, but |
- % we need to do it before changing the fonts, and it's inconvenient |
- % to change the fonts afterward. |
- \ifnum \lastpenalty=10000 \else \endgraf \fi |
- \smallexamplefonts \rm |
- \fi |
-} |
-\def\setsmalldispenv{% |
- \ifx\SETdispenvsize\nosmallword |
- \else |
- \ifnum \lastpenalty=10000 \else \endgraf \fi |
- \smallexamplefonts \rm |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% We often define two environments, @foo and @smallfoo. |
-% Let's do it by one command: |
-\def\makedispenv #1#2{ |
- \expandafter\envdef\csname#1\endcsname {\setnormaldispenv #2} |
- \expandafter\envdef\csname small#1\endcsname {\setsmalldispenv #2} |
- \expandafter\let\csname E#1\endcsname \afterenvbreak |
- \expandafter\let\csname Esmall#1\endcsname \afterenvbreak |
-} |
- |
-% Define two synonyms: |
-\def\maketwodispenvs #1#2#3{ |
- \makedispenv{#1}{#3} |
- \makedispenv{#2}{#3} |
-} |
- |
-% @lisp: indented, narrowed, typewriter font; @example: same as @lisp. |
-% |
-% @smallexample and @smalllisp: use smaller fonts. |
-% Originally contributed by Pavel@xerox. |
-% |
-\maketwodispenvs {lisp}{example}{% |
- \nonfillstart |
- \tt\quoteexpand |
- \let\kbdfont = \kbdexamplefont % Allow @kbd to do something special. |
- \gobble % eat return |
-} |
-% @display/@smalldisplay: same as @lisp except keep current font. |
-% |
-\makedispenv {display}{% |
- \nonfillstart |
- \gobble |
-} |
- |
-% @format/@smallformat: same as @display except don't narrow margins. |
-% |
-\makedispenv{format}{% |
- \let\nonarrowing = t% |
- \nonfillstart |
- \gobble |
-} |
- |
-% @flushleft: same as @format, but doesn't obey \SETdispenvsize. |
-\envdef\flushleft{% |
- \let\nonarrowing = t% |
- \nonfillstart |
- \gobble |
-} |
-\let\Eflushleft = \afterenvbreak |
- |
-% @flushright. |
-% |
-\envdef\flushright{% |
- \let\nonarrowing = t% |
- \nonfillstart |
- \advance\leftskip by 0pt plus 1fill |
- \gobble |
-} |
-\let\Eflushright = \afterenvbreak |
- |
- |
-% @quotation does normal linebreaking (hence we can't use \nonfillstart) |
-% and narrows the margins. We keep \parskip nonzero in general, since |
-% we're doing normal filling. So, when using \aboveenvbreak and |
-% \afterenvbreak, temporarily make \parskip 0. |
-% |
-\envdef\quotation{% |
- {\parskip=0pt \aboveenvbreak}% because \aboveenvbreak inserts \parskip |
- \parindent=0pt |
- % |
- % @cartouche defines \nonarrowing to inhibit narrowing at next level down. |
- \ifx\nonarrowing\relax |
- \advance\leftskip by \lispnarrowing |
- \advance\rightskip by \lispnarrowing |
- \exdentamount = \lispnarrowing |
- \else |
- \let\nonarrowing = \relax |
- \fi |
- \parsearg\quotationlabel |
-} |
- |
-% We have retained a nonzero parskip for the environment, since we're |
-% doing normal filling. |
-% |
-\def\Equotation{% |
- \par |
- \ifx\quotationauthor\undefined\else |
- % indent a bit. |
- \leftline{\kern 2\leftskip \sl ---\quotationauthor}% |
- \fi |
- {\parskip=0pt \afterenvbreak}% |
-} |
- |
-% If we're given an argument, typeset it in bold with a colon after. |
-\def\quotationlabel#1{% |
- \def\temp{#1}% |
- \ifx\temp\empty \else |
- {\bf #1: }% |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
- |
-% LaTeX-like @verbatim...@end verbatim and @verb{<char>...<char>} |
-% If we want to allow any <char> as delimiter, |
-% we need the curly braces so that makeinfo sees the @verb command, eg: |
-% `@verbx...x' would look like the '@verbx' command. --janneke@gnu.org |
-% |
-% [Knuth]: Donald Ervin Knuth, 1996. The TeXbook. |
-% |
-% [Knuth] p.344; only we need to do the other characters Texinfo sets |
-% active too. Otherwise, they get lost as the first character on a |
-% verbatim line. |
-\def\dospecials{% |
- \do\ \do\\\do\{\do\}\do\$\do\&% |
- \do\#\do\^\do\^^K\do\_\do\^^A\do\%\do\~% |
- \do\<\do\>\do\|\do\@\do+\do\"% |
-} |
-% |
-% [Knuth] p. 380 |
-\def\uncatcodespecials{% |
- \def\do##1{\catcode`##1=\other}\dospecials} |
-% |
-% [Knuth] pp. 380,381,391 |
-% Disable Spanish ligatures ?` and !` of \tt font |
-\begingroup |
- \catcode`\`=\active\gdef`{\relax\lq} |
-\endgroup |
-% |
-% Setup for the @verb command. |
-% |
-% Eight spaces for a tab |
-\begingroup |
- \catcode`\^^I=\active |
- \gdef\tabeightspaces{\catcode`\^^I=\active\def^^I{\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ }} |
-\endgroup |
-% |
-\def\setupverb{% |
- \tt % easiest (and conventionally used) font for verbatim |
- \def\par{\leavevmode\endgraf}% |
- \catcode`\`=\active |
- \tabeightspaces |
- % Respect line breaks, |
- % print special symbols as themselves, and |
- % make each space count |
- % must do in this order: |
- \obeylines \uncatcodespecials \sepspaces |
-} |
- |
-% Setup for the @verbatim environment |
-% |
-% Real tab expansion |
-\newdimen\tabw \setbox0=\hbox{\tt\space} \tabw=8\wd0 % tab amount |
-% |
-\def\starttabbox{\setbox0=\hbox\bgroup} |
- |
-% Allow an option to not replace quotes with a regular directed right |
-% quote/apostrophe (char 0x27), but instead use the undirected quote |
-% from cmtt (char 0x0d). The undirected quote is ugly, so don't make it |
-% the default, but it works for pasting with more pdf viewers (at least |
-% evince), the lilypond developers report. xpdf does work with the |
-% regular 0x27. |
-% |
-\def\codequoteright{% |
- \expandafter\ifx\csname SETtxicodequoteundirected\endcsname\relax |
- \expandafter\ifx\csname SETcodequoteundirected\endcsname\relax |
- '% |
- \else \char'15 \fi |
- \else \char'15 \fi |
-} |
-% |
-% and a similar option for the left quote char vs. a grave accent. |
-% Modern fonts display ASCII 0x60 as a grave accent, so some people like |
-% the code environments to do likewise. |
-% |
-\def\codequoteleft{% |
- \expandafter\ifx\csname SETtxicodequotebacktick\endcsname\relax |
- \expandafter\ifx\csname SETcodequotebacktick\endcsname\relax |
- `% |
- \else \char'22 \fi |
- \else \char'22 \fi |
-} |
-% |
-\begingroup |
- \catcode`\^^I=\active |
- \gdef\tabexpand{% |
- \catcode`\^^I=\active |
- \def^^I{\leavevmode\egroup |
- \dimen0=\wd0 % the width so far, or since the previous tab |
- \divide\dimen0 by\tabw |
- \multiply\dimen0 by\tabw % compute previous multiple of \tabw |
- \advance\dimen0 by\tabw % advance to next multiple of \tabw |
- \wd0=\dimen0 \box0 \starttabbox |
- }% |
- } |
- \catcode`\'=\active |
- \gdef\rquoteexpand{\catcode\rquoteChar=\active \def'{\codequoteright}}% |
- % |
- \catcode`\`=\active |
- \gdef\lquoteexpand{\catcode\lquoteChar=\active \def`{\codequoteleft}}% |
- % |
- \gdef\quoteexpand{\rquoteexpand \lquoteexpand}% |
-\endgroup |
- |
-% start the verbatim environment. |
-\def\setupverbatim{% |
- \let\nonarrowing = t% |
- \nonfillstart |
- % Easiest (and conventionally used) font for verbatim |
- \tt |
- \def\par{\leavevmode\egroup\box0\endgraf}% |
- \catcode`\`=\active |
- \tabexpand |
- \quoteexpand |
- % Respect line breaks, |
- % print special symbols as themselves, and |
- % make each space count |
- % must do in this order: |
- \obeylines \uncatcodespecials \sepspaces |
- \everypar{\starttabbox}% |
-} |
- |
-% Do the @verb magic: verbatim text is quoted by unique |
-% delimiter characters. Before first delimiter expect a |
-% right brace, after last delimiter expect closing brace: |
-% |
-% \def\doverb'{'<char>#1<char>'}'{#1} |
-% |
-% [Knuth] p. 382; only eat outer {} |
-\begingroup |
- \catcode`[=1\catcode`]=2\catcode`\{=\other\catcode`\}=\other |
- \gdef\doverb{#1[\def\next##1#1}[##1\endgroup]\next] |
-\endgroup |
-% |
-\def\verb{\begingroup\setupverb\doverb} |
-% |
-% |
-% Do the @verbatim magic: define the macro \doverbatim so that |
-% the (first) argument ends when '@end verbatim' is reached, ie: |
-% |
-% \def\doverbatim#1@end verbatim{#1} |
-% |
-% For Texinfo it's a lot easier than for LaTeX, |
-% because texinfo's \verbatim doesn't stop at '\end{verbatim}': |
-% we need not redefine '\', '{' and '}'. |
-% |
-% Inspired by LaTeX's verbatim command set [latex.ltx] |
-% |
-\begingroup |
- \catcode`\ =\active |
- \obeylines % |
- % ignore everything up to the first ^^M, that's the newline at the end |
- % of the @verbatim input line itself. Otherwise we get an extra blank |
- % line in the output. |
- \xdef\doverbatim#1^^M#2@end verbatim{#2\noexpand\end\gobble verbatim}% |
- % We really want {...\end verbatim} in the body of the macro, but |
- % without the active space; thus we have to use \xdef and \gobble. |
-\endgroup |
-% |
-\envdef\verbatim{% |
- \setupverbatim\doverbatim |
-} |
-\let\Everbatim = \afterenvbreak |
- |
- |
-% @verbatiminclude FILE - insert text of file in verbatim environment. |
-% |
-\def\verbatiminclude{\parseargusing\filenamecatcodes\doverbatiminclude} |
-% |
-\def\doverbatiminclude#1{% |
- {% |
- \makevalueexpandable |
- \setupverbatim |
- \input #1 |
- \afterenvbreak |
- }% |
-} |
- |
-% @copying ... @end copying. |
-% Save the text away for @insertcopying later. |
-% |
-% We save the uninterpreted tokens, rather than creating a box. |
-% Saving the text in a box would be much easier, but then all the |
-% typesetting commands (@smallbook, font changes, etc.) have to be done |
-% beforehand -- and a) we want @copying to be done first in the source |
-% file; b) letting users define the frontmatter in as flexible order as |
-% possible is very desirable. |
-% |
-\def\copying{\checkenv{}\begingroup\scanargctxt\docopying} |
-\def\docopying#1@end copying{\endgroup\def\copyingtext{#1}} |
-% |
-\def\insertcopying{% |
- \begingroup |
- \parindent = 0pt % paragraph indentation looks wrong on title page |
- \scanexp\copyingtext |
- \endgroup |
-} |
- |
- |
-\message{defuns,} |
-% @defun etc. |
- |
-\newskip\defbodyindent \defbodyindent=.4in |
-\newskip\defargsindent \defargsindent=50pt |
-\newskip\deflastargmargin \deflastargmargin=18pt |
-\newcount\defunpenalty |
- |
-% Start the processing of @deffn: |
-\def\startdefun{% |
- \ifnum\lastpenalty<10000 |
- \medbreak |
- \defunpenalty=10003 % Will keep this @deffn together with the |
- % following @def command, see below. |
- \else |
- % If there are two @def commands in a row, we'll have a \nobreak, |
- % which is there to keep the function description together with its |
- % header. But if there's nothing but headers, we need to allow a |
- % break somewhere. Check specifically for penalty 10002, inserted |
- % by \printdefunline, instead of 10000, since the sectioning |
- % commands also insert a nobreak penalty, and we don't want to allow |
- % a break between a section heading and a defun. |
- % |
- % As a minor refinement, we avoid "club" headers by signalling |
- % with penalty of 10003 after the very first @deffn in the |
- % sequence (see above), and penalty of 10002 after any following |
- % @def command. |
- \ifnum\lastpenalty=10002 \penalty2000 \else \defunpenalty=10002 \fi |
- % |
- % Similarly, after a section heading, do not allow a break. |
- % But do insert the glue. |
- \medskip % preceded by discardable penalty, so not a breakpoint |
- \fi |
- % |
- \parindent=0in |
- \advance\leftskip by \defbodyindent |
- \exdentamount=\defbodyindent |
-} |
- |
-\def\dodefunx#1{% |
- % First, check whether we are in the right environment: |
- \checkenv#1% |
- % |
- % As above, allow line break if we have multiple x headers in a row. |
- % It's not a great place, though. |
- \ifnum\lastpenalty=10002 \penalty3000 \else \defunpenalty=10002 \fi |
- % |
- % And now, it's time to reuse the body of the original defun: |
- \expandafter\gobbledefun#1% |
-} |
-\def\gobbledefun#1\startdefun{} |
- |
-% \printdefunline \deffnheader{text} |
-% |
-\def\printdefunline#1#2{% |
- \begingroup |
- % call \deffnheader: |
- #1#2 \endheader |
- % common ending: |
- \interlinepenalty = 10000 |
- \advance\rightskip by 0pt plus 1fil |
- \endgraf |
- \nobreak\vskip -\parskip |
- \penalty\defunpenalty % signal to \startdefun and \dodefunx |
- % Some of the @defun-type tags do not enable magic parentheses, |
- % rendering the following check redundant. But we don't optimize. |
- \checkparencounts |
- \endgroup |
-} |
- |
-\def\Edefun{\endgraf\medbreak} |
- |
-% \makedefun{deffn} creates \deffn, \deffnx and \Edeffn; |
-% the only thing remaining is to define \deffnheader. |
-% |
-\def\makedefun#1{% |
- \expandafter\let\csname E#1\endcsname = \Edefun |
- \edef\temp{\noexpand\domakedefun |
- \makecsname{#1}\makecsname{#1x}\makecsname{#1header}}% |
- \temp |
-} |
- |
-% \domakedefun \deffn \deffnx \deffnheader |
-% |
-% Define \deffn and \deffnx, without parameters. |
-% \deffnheader has to be defined explicitly. |
-% |
-\def\domakedefun#1#2#3{% |
- \envdef#1{% |
- \startdefun |
- \parseargusing\activeparens{\printdefunline#3}% |
- }% |
- \def#2{\dodefunx#1}% |
- \def#3% |
-} |
- |
-%%% Untyped functions: |
- |
-% @deffn category name args |
-\makedefun{deffn}{\deffngeneral{}} |
- |
-% @deffn category class name args |
-\makedefun{defop}#1 {\defopon{#1\ \putwordon}} |
- |
-% \defopon {category on}class name args |
-\def\defopon#1#2 {\deffngeneral{\putwordon\ \code{#2}}{#1\ \code{#2}} } |
- |
-% \deffngeneral {subind}category name args |
-% |
-\def\deffngeneral#1#2 #3 #4\endheader{% |
- % Remember that \dosubind{fn}{foo}{} is equivalent to \doind{fn}{foo}. |
- \dosubind{fn}{\code{#3}}{#1}% |
- \defname{#2}{}{#3}\magicamp\defunargs{#4\unskip}% |
-} |
- |
-%%% Typed functions: |
- |
-% @deftypefn category type name args |
-\makedefun{deftypefn}{\deftypefngeneral{}} |
- |
-% @deftypeop category class type name args |
-\makedefun{deftypeop}#1 {\deftypeopon{#1\ \putwordon}} |
- |
-% \deftypeopon {category on}class type name args |
-\def\deftypeopon#1#2 {\deftypefngeneral{\putwordon\ \code{#2}}{#1\ \code{#2}} } |
- |
-% \deftypefngeneral {subind}category type name args |
-% |
-\def\deftypefngeneral#1#2 #3 #4 #5\endheader{% |
- \dosubind{fn}{\code{#4}}{#1}% |
- \defname{#2}{#3}{#4}\defunargs{#5\unskip}% |
-} |
- |
-%%% Typed variables: |
- |
-% @deftypevr category type var args |
-\makedefun{deftypevr}{\deftypecvgeneral{}} |
- |
-% @deftypecv category class type var args |
-\makedefun{deftypecv}#1 {\deftypecvof{#1\ \putwordof}} |
- |
-% \deftypecvof {category of}class type var args |
-\def\deftypecvof#1#2 {\deftypecvgeneral{\putwordof\ \code{#2}}{#1\ \code{#2}} } |
- |
-% \deftypecvgeneral {subind}category type var args |
-% |
-\def\deftypecvgeneral#1#2 #3 #4 #5\endheader{% |
- \dosubind{vr}{\code{#4}}{#1}% |
- \defname{#2}{#3}{#4}\defunargs{#5\unskip}% |
-} |
- |
-%%% Untyped variables: |
- |
-% @defvr category var args |
-\makedefun{defvr}#1 {\deftypevrheader{#1} {} } |
- |
-% @defcv category class var args |
-\makedefun{defcv}#1 {\defcvof{#1\ \putwordof}} |
- |
-% \defcvof {category of}class var args |
-\def\defcvof#1#2 {\deftypecvof{#1}#2 {} } |
- |
-%%% Type: |
-% @deftp category name args |
-\makedefun{deftp}#1 #2 #3\endheader{% |
- \doind{tp}{\code{#2}}% |
- \defname{#1}{}{#2}\defunargs{#3\unskip}% |
-} |
- |
-% Remaining @defun-like shortcuts: |
-\makedefun{defun}{\deffnheader{\putwordDeffunc} } |
-\makedefun{defmac}{\deffnheader{\putwordDefmac} } |
-\makedefun{defspec}{\deffnheader{\putwordDefspec} } |
-\makedefun{deftypefun}{\deftypefnheader{\putwordDeffunc} } |
-\makedefun{defvar}{\defvrheader{\putwordDefvar} } |
-\makedefun{defopt}{\defvrheader{\putwordDefopt} } |
-\makedefun{deftypevar}{\deftypevrheader{\putwordDefvar} } |
-\makedefun{defmethod}{\defopon\putwordMethodon} |
-\makedefun{deftypemethod}{\deftypeopon\putwordMethodon} |
-\makedefun{defivar}{\defcvof\putwordInstanceVariableof} |
-\makedefun{deftypeivar}{\deftypecvof\putwordInstanceVariableof} |
- |
-% \defname, which formats the name of the @def (not the args). |
-% #1 is the category, such as "Function". |
-% #2 is the return type, if any. |
-% #3 is the function name. |
-% |
-% We are followed by (but not passed) the arguments, if any. |
-% |
-\def\defname#1#2#3{% |
- % Get the values of \leftskip and \rightskip as they were outside the @def... |
- \advance\leftskip by -\defbodyindent |
- % |
- % How we'll format the type name. Putting it in brackets helps |
- % distinguish it from the body text that may end up on the next line |
- % just below it. |
- \def\temp{#1}% |
- \setbox0=\hbox{\kern\deflastargmargin \ifx\temp\empty\else [\rm\temp]\fi} |
- % |
- % Figure out line sizes for the paragraph shape. |
- % The first line needs space for \box0; but if \rightskip is nonzero, |
- % we need only space for the part of \box0 which exceeds it: |
- \dimen0=\hsize \advance\dimen0 by -\wd0 \advance\dimen0 by \rightskip |
- % The continuations: |
- \dimen2=\hsize \advance\dimen2 by -\defargsindent |
- % (plain.tex says that \dimen1 should be used only as global.) |
- \parshape 2 0in \dimen0 \defargsindent \dimen2 |
- % |
- % Put the type name to the right margin. |
- \noindent |
- \hbox to 0pt{% |
- \hfil\box0 \kern-\hsize |
- % \hsize has to be shortened this way: |
- \kern\leftskip |
- % Intentionally do not respect \rightskip, since we need the space. |
- }% |
- % |
- % Allow all lines to be underfull without complaint: |
- \tolerance=10000 \hbadness=10000 |
- \exdentamount=\defbodyindent |
- {% |
- % defun fonts. We use typewriter by default (used to be bold) because: |
- % . we're printing identifiers, they should be in tt in principle. |
- % . in languages with many accents, such as Czech or French, it's |
- % common to leave accents off identifiers. The result looks ok in |
- % tt, but exceedingly strange in rm. |
- % . we don't want -- and --- to be treated as ligatures. |
- % . this still does not fix the ?` and !` ligatures, but so far no |
- % one has made identifiers using them :). |
- \df \tt |
- \def\temp{#2}% return value type |
- \ifx\temp\empty\else \tclose{\temp} \fi |
- #3% output function name |
- }% |
- {\rm\enskip}% hskip 0.5 em of \tenrm |
- % |
- \boldbrax |
- % arguments will be output next, if any. |
-} |
- |
-% Print arguments in slanted roman (not ttsl), inconsistently with using |
-% tt for the name. This is because literal text is sometimes needed in |
-% the argument list (groff manual), and ttsl and tt are not very |
-% distinguishable. Prevent hyphenation at `-' chars. |
-% |
-\def\defunargs#1{% |
- % use sl by default (not ttsl), |
- % tt for the names. |
- \df \sl \hyphenchar\font=0 |
- % |
- % On the other hand, if an argument has two dashes (for instance), we |
- % want a way to get ttsl. Let's try @var for that. |
- \let\var=\ttslanted |
- #1% |
- \sl\hyphenchar\font=45 |
-} |
- |
-% We want ()&[] to print specially on the defun line. |
-% |
-\def\activeparens{% |
- \catcode`\(=\active \catcode`\)=\active |
- \catcode`\[=\active \catcode`\]=\active |
- \catcode`\&=\active |
-} |
- |
-% Make control sequences which act like normal parenthesis chars. |
-\let\lparen = ( \let\rparen = ) |
- |
-% Be sure that we always have a definition for `(', etc. For example, |
-% if the fn name has parens in it, \boldbrax will not be in effect yet, |
-% so TeX would otherwise complain about undefined control sequence. |
-{ |
- \activeparens |
- \global\let(=\lparen \global\let)=\rparen |
- \global\let[=\lbrack \global\let]=\rbrack |
- \global\let& = \& |
- |
- \gdef\boldbrax{\let(=\opnr\let)=\clnr\let[=\lbrb\let]=\rbrb} |
- \gdef\magicamp{\let&=\amprm} |
-} |
- |
-\newcount\parencount |
- |
-% If we encounter &foo, then turn on ()-hacking afterwards |
-\newif\ifampseen |
-\def\amprm#1 {\ampseentrue{\bf\ }} |
- |
-\def\parenfont{% |
- \ifampseen |
- % At the first level, print parens in roman, |
- % otherwise use the default font. |
- \ifnum \parencount=1 \rm \fi |
- \else |
- % The \sf parens (in \boldbrax) actually are a little bolder than |
- % the contained text. This is especially needed for [ and ] . |
- \sf |
- \fi |
-} |
-\def\infirstlevel#1{% |
- \ifampseen |
- \ifnum\parencount=1 |
- #1% |
- \fi |
- \fi |
-} |
-\def\bfafterword#1 {#1 \bf} |
- |
-\def\opnr{% |
- \global\advance\parencount by 1 |
- {\parenfont(}% |
- \infirstlevel \bfafterword |
-} |
-\def\clnr{% |
- {\parenfont)}% |
- \infirstlevel \sl |
- \global\advance\parencount by -1 |
-} |
- |
-\newcount\brackcount |
-\def\lbrb{% |
- \global\advance\brackcount by 1 |
- {\bf[}% |
-} |
-\def\rbrb{% |
- {\bf]}% |
- \global\advance\brackcount by -1 |
-} |
- |
-\def\checkparencounts{% |
- \ifnum\parencount=0 \else \badparencount \fi |
- \ifnum\brackcount=0 \else \badbrackcount \fi |
-} |
-% these should not use \errmessage; the glibc manual, at least, actually |
-% has such constructs (when documenting function pointers). |
-\def\badparencount{% |
- \message{Warning: unbalanced parentheses in @def...}% |
- \global\parencount=0 |
-} |
-\def\badbrackcount{% |
- \message{Warning: unbalanced square brackets in @def...}% |
- \global\brackcount=0 |
-} |
- |
- |
-\message{macros,} |
-% @macro. |
- |
-% To do this right we need a feature of e-TeX, \scantokens, |
-% which we arrange to emulate with a temporary file in ordinary TeX. |
-\ifx\eTeXversion\undefined |
- \newwrite\macscribble |
- \def\scantokens#1{% |
- \toks0={#1}% |
- \immediate\openout\macscribble=\jobname.tmp |
- \immediate\write\macscribble{\the\toks0}% |
- \immediate\closeout\macscribble |
- \input \jobname.tmp |
- } |
-\fi |
- |
-\def\scanmacro#1{% |
- \begingroup |
- \newlinechar`\^^M |
- \let\xeatspaces\eatspaces |
- % Undo catcode changes of \startcontents and \doprintindex |
- % When called from @insertcopying or (short)caption, we need active |
- % backslash to get it printed correctly. Previously, we had |
- % \catcode`\\=\other instead. We'll see whether a problem appears |
- % with macro expansion. --kasal, 19aug04 |
- \catcode`\@=0 \catcode`\\=\active \escapechar=`\@ |
- % ... and \example |
- \spaceisspace |
- % |
- % Append \endinput to make sure that TeX does not see the ending newline. |
- % I've verified that it is necessary both for e-TeX and for ordinary TeX |
- % --kasal, 29nov03 |
- \scantokens{#1\endinput}% |
- \endgroup |
-} |
- |
-\def\scanexp#1{% |
- \edef\temp{\noexpand\scanmacro{#1}}% |
- \temp |
-} |
- |
-\newcount\paramno % Count of parameters |
-\newtoks\macname % Macro name |
-\newif\ifrecursive % Is it recursive? |
- |
-% List of all defined macros in the form |
-% \definedummyword\macro1\definedummyword\macro2... |
-% Currently is also contains all @aliases; the list can be split |
-% if there is a need. |
-\def\macrolist{} |
- |
-% Add the macro to \macrolist |
-\def\addtomacrolist#1{\expandafter \addtomacrolistxxx \csname#1\endcsname} |
-\def\addtomacrolistxxx#1{% |
- \toks0 = \expandafter{\macrolist\definedummyword#1}% |
- \xdef\macrolist{\the\toks0}% |
-} |
- |
-% Utility routines. |
-% This does \let #1 = #2, with \csnames; that is, |
-% \let \csname#1\endcsname = \csname#2\endcsname |
-% (except of course we have to play expansion games). |
-% |
-\def\cslet#1#2{% |
- \expandafter\let |
- \csname#1\expandafter\endcsname |
- \csname#2\endcsname |
-} |
- |
-% Trim leading and trailing spaces off a string. |
-% Concepts from aro-bend problem 15 (see CTAN). |
-{\catcode`\@=11 |
-\gdef\eatspaces #1{\expandafter\trim@\expandafter{#1 }} |
-\gdef\trim@ #1{\trim@@ @#1 @ #1 @ @@} |
-\gdef\trim@@ #1@ #2@ #3@@{\trim@@@\empty #2 @} |
-\def\unbrace#1{#1} |
-\unbrace{\gdef\trim@@@ #1 } #2@{#1} |
-} |
- |
-% Trim a single trailing ^^M off a string. |
-{\catcode`\^^M=\other \catcode`\Q=3% |
-\gdef\eatcr #1{\eatcra #1Q^^MQ}% |
-\gdef\eatcra#1^^MQ{\eatcrb#1Q}% |
-\gdef\eatcrb#1Q#2Q{#1}% |
-} |
- |
-% Macro bodies are absorbed as an argument in a context where |
-% all characters are catcode 10, 11 or 12, except \ which is active |
-% (as in normal texinfo). It is necessary to change the definition of \. |
- |
-% Non-ASCII encodings make 8-bit characters active, so un-activate |
-% them to avoid their expansion. Must do this non-globally, to |
-% confine the change to the current group. |
- |
-% It's necessary to have hard CRs when the macro is executed. This is |
-% done by making ^^M (\endlinechar) catcode 12 when reading the macro |
-% body, and then making it the \newlinechar in \scanmacro. |
- |
-\def\scanctxt{% |
- \catcode`\"=\other |
- \catcode`\+=\other |
- \catcode`\<=\other |
- \catcode`\>=\other |
- \catcode`\@=\other |
- \catcode`\^=\other |
- \catcode`\_=\other |
- \catcode`\|=\other |
- \catcode`\~=\other |
- \ifx\declaredencoding\ascii \else \setnonasciicharscatcodenonglobal\other \fi |
-} |
- |
-\def\scanargctxt{% |
- \scanctxt |
- \catcode`\\=\other |
- \catcode`\^^M=\other |
-} |
- |
-\def\macrobodyctxt{% |
- \scanctxt |
- \catcode`\{=\other |
- \catcode`\}=\other |
- \catcode`\^^M=\other |
- \usembodybackslash |
-} |
- |
-\def\macroargctxt{% |
- \scanctxt |
- \catcode`\\=\other |
-} |
- |
-% \mbodybackslash is the definition of \ in @macro bodies. |
-% It maps \foo\ => \csname macarg.foo\endcsname => #N |
-% where N is the macro parameter number. |
-% We define \csname macarg.\endcsname to be \realbackslash, so |
-% \\ in macro replacement text gets you a backslash. |
- |
-{\catcode`@=0 @catcode`@\=@active |
- @gdef@usembodybackslash{@let\=@mbodybackslash} |
- @gdef@mbodybackslash#1\{@csname macarg.#1@endcsname} |
-} |
-\expandafter\def\csname macarg.\endcsname{\realbackslash} |
- |
-\def\macro{\recursivefalse\parsearg\macroxxx} |
-\def\rmacro{\recursivetrue\parsearg\macroxxx} |
- |
-\def\macroxxx#1{% |
- \getargs{#1}% now \macname is the macname and \argl the arglist |
- \ifx\argl\empty % no arguments |
- \paramno=0% |
- \else |
- \expandafter\parsemargdef \argl;% |
- \fi |
- \if1\csname ismacro.\the\macname\endcsname |
- \message{Warning: redefining \the\macname}% |
- \else |
- \expandafter\ifx\csname \the\macname\endcsname \relax |
- \else \errmessage{Macro name \the\macname\space already defined}\fi |
- \global\cslet{macsave.\the\macname}{\the\macname}% |
- \global\expandafter\let\csname ismacro.\the\macname\endcsname=1% |
- \addtomacrolist{\the\macname}% |
- \fi |
- \begingroup \macrobodyctxt |
- \ifrecursive \expandafter\parsermacbody |
- \else \expandafter\parsemacbody |
- \fi} |
- |
-\parseargdef\unmacro{% |
- \if1\csname ismacro.#1\endcsname |
- \global\cslet{#1}{macsave.#1}% |
- \global\expandafter\let \csname ismacro.#1\endcsname=0% |
- % Remove the macro name from \macrolist: |
- \begingroup |
- \expandafter\let\csname#1\endcsname \relax |
- \let\definedummyword\unmacrodo |
- \xdef\macrolist{\macrolist}% |
- \endgroup |
- \else |
- \errmessage{Macro #1 not defined}% |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% Called by \do from \dounmacro on each macro. The idea is to omit any |
-% macro definitions that have been changed to \relax. |
-% |
-\def\unmacrodo#1{% |
- \ifx #1\relax |
- % remove this |
- \else |
- \noexpand\definedummyword \noexpand#1% |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% This makes use of the obscure feature that if the last token of a |
-% <parameter list> is #, then the preceding argument is delimited by |
-% an opening brace, and that opening brace is not consumed. |
-\def\getargs#1{\getargsxxx#1{}} |
-\def\getargsxxx#1#{\getmacname #1 \relax\getmacargs} |
-\def\getmacname #1 #2\relax{\macname={#1}} |
-\def\getmacargs#1{\def\argl{#1}} |
- |
-% Parse the optional {params} list. Set up \paramno and \paramlist |
-% so \defmacro knows what to do. Define \macarg.blah for each blah |
-% in the params list, to be ##N where N is the position in that list. |
-% That gets used by \mbodybackslash (above). |
- |
-% We need to get `macro parameter char #' into several definitions. |
-% The technique used is stolen from LaTeX: let \hash be something |
-% unexpandable, insert that wherever you need a #, and then redefine |
-% it to # just before using the token list produced. |
-% |
-% The same technique is used to protect \eatspaces till just before |
-% the macro is used. |
- |
-\def\parsemargdef#1;{\paramno=0\def\paramlist{}% |
- \let\hash\relax\let\xeatspaces\relax\parsemargdefxxx#1,;,} |
-\def\parsemargdefxxx#1,{% |
- \if#1;\let\next=\relax |
- \else \let\next=\parsemargdefxxx |
- \advance\paramno by 1% |
- \expandafter\edef\csname macarg.\eatspaces{#1}\endcsname |
- {\xeatspaces{\hash\the\paramno}}% |
- \edef\paramlist{\paramlist\hash\the\paramno,}% |
- \fi\next} |
- |
-% These two commands read recursive and nonrecursive macro bodies. |
-% (They're different since rec and nonrec macros end differently.) |
- |
-\long\def\parsemacbody#1@end macro% |
-{\xdef\temp{\eatcr{#1}}\endgroup\defmacro}% |
-\long\def\parsermacbody#1@end rmacro% |
-{\xdef\temp{\eatcr{#1}}\endgroup\defmacro}% |
- |
-% This defines the macro itself. There are six cases: recursive and |
-% nonrecursive macros of zero, one, and many arguments. |
-% Much magic with \expandafter here. |
-% \xdef is used so that macro definitions will survive the file |
-% they're defined in; @include reads the file inside a group. |
-\def\defmacro{% |
- \let\hash=##% convert placeholders to macro parameter chars |
- \ifrecursive |
- \ifcase\paramno |
- % 0 |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname\the\macname\endcsname{% |
- \noexpand\scanmacro{\temp}}% |
- \or % 1 |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname\the\macname\endcsname{% |
- \bgroup\noexpand\macroargctxt |
- \noexpand\braceorline |
- \expandafter\noexpand\csname\the\macname xxx\endcsname}% |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname\the\macname xxx\endcsname##1{% |
- \egroup\noexpand\scanmacro{\temp}}% |
- \else % many |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname\the\macname\endcsname{% |
- \bgroup\noexpand\macroargctxt |
- \noexpand\csname\the\macname xx\endcsname}% |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname\the\macname xx\endcsname##1{% |
- \expandafter\noexpand\csname\the\macname xxx\endcsname ##1,}% |
- \expandafter\expandafter |
- \expandafter\xdef |
- \expandafter\expandafter |
- \csname\the\macname xxx\endcsname |
- \paramlist{\egroup\noexpand\scanmacro{\temp}}% |
- \fi |
- \else |
- \ifcase\paramno |
- % 0 |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname\the\macname\endcsname{% |
- \noexpand\norecurse{\the\macname}% |
- \noexpand\scanmacro{\temp}\egroup}% |
- \or % 1 |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname\the\macname\endcsname{% |
- \bgroup\noexpand\macroargctxt |
- \noexpand\braceorline |
- \expandafter\noexpand\csname\the\macname xxx\endcsname}% |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname\the\macname xxx\endcsname##1{% |
- \egroup |
- \noexpand\norecurse{\the\macname}% |
- \noexpand\scanmacro{\temp}\egroup}% |
- \else % many |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname\the\macname\endcsname{% |
- \bgroup\noexpand\macroargctxt |
- \expandafter\noexpand\csname\the\macname xx\endcsname}% |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname\the\macname xx\endcsname##1{% |
- \expandafter\noexpand\csname\the\macname xxx\endcsname ##1,}% |
- \expandafter\expandafter |
- \expandafter\xdef |
- \expandafter\expandafter |
- \csname\the\macname xxx\endcsname |
- \paramlist{% |
- \egroup |
- \noexpand\norecurse{\the\macname}% |
- \noexpand\scanmacro{\temp}\egroup}% |
- \fi |
- \fi} |
- |
-\def\norecurse#1{\bgroup\cslet{#1}{macsave.#1}} |
- |
-% \braceorline decides whether the next nonwhitespace character is a |
-% {. If so it reads up to the closing }, if not, it reads the whole |
-% line. Whatever was read is then fed to the next control sequence |
-% as an argument (by \parsebrace or \parsearg) |
-\def\braceorline#1{\let\macnamexxx=#1\futurelet\nchar\braceorlinexxx} |
-\def\braceorlinexxx{% |
- \ifx\nchar\bgroup\else |
- \expandafter\parsearg |
- \fi \macnamexxx} |
- |
- |
-% @alias. |
-% We need some trickery to remove the optional spaces around the equal |
-% sign. Just make them active and then expand them all to nothing. |
-\def\alias{\parseargusing\obeyspaces\aliasxxx} |
-\def\aliasxxx #1{\aliasyyy#1\relax} |
-\def\aliasyyy #1=#2\relax{% |
- {% |
- \expandafter\let\obeyedspace=\empty |
- \addtomacrolist{#1}% |
- \xdef\next{\global\let\makecsname{#1}=\makecsname{#2}}% |
- }% |
- \next |
-} |
- |
- |
-\message{cross references,} |
- |
-\newwrite\auxfile |
-\newif\ifhavexrefs % True if xref values are known. |
-\newif\ifwarnedxrefs % True if we warned once that they aren't known. |
- |
-% @inforef is relatively simple. |
-\def\inforef #1{\inforefzzz #1,,,,**} |
-\def\inforefzzz #1,#2,#3,#4**{\putwordSee{} \putwordInfo{} \putwordfile{} \file{\ignorespaces #3{}}, |
- node \samp{\ignorespaces#1{}}} |
- |
-% @node's only job in TeX is to define \lastnode, which is used in |
-% cross-references. The @node line might or might not have commas, and |
-% might or might not have spaces before the first comma, like: |
-% @node foo , bar , ... |
-% We don't want such trailing spaces in the node name. |
-% |
-\parseargdef\node{\checkenv{}\donode #1 ,\finishnodeparse} |
-% |
-% also remove a trailing comma, in case of something like this: |
-% @node Help-Cross, , , Cross-refs |
-\def\donode#1 ,#2\finishnodeparse{\dodonode #1,\finishnodeparse} |
-\def\dodonode#1,#2\finishnodeparse{\gdef\lastnode{#1}} |
- |
-\let\nwnode=\node |
-\let\lastnode=\empty |
- |
-% Write a cross-reference definition for the current node. #1 is the |
-% type (Ynumbered, Yappendix, Ynothing). |
-% |
-\def\donoderef#1{% |
- \ifx\lastnode\empty\else |
- \setref{\lastnode}{#1}% |
- \global\let\lastnode=\empty |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% @anchor{NAME} -- define xref target at arbitrary point. |
-% |
-\newcount\savesfregister |
-% |
-\def\savesf{\relax \ifhmode \savesfregister=\spacefactor \fi} |
-\def\restoresf{\relax \ifhmode \spacefactor=\savesfregister \fi} |
-\def\anchor#1{\savesf \setref{#1}{Ynothing}\restoresf \ignorespaces} |
- |
-% \setref{NAME}{SNT} defines a cross-reference point NAME (a node or an |
-% anchor), which consists of three parts: |
-% 1) NAME-title - the current sectioning name taken from \lastsection, |
-% or the anchor name. |
-% 2) NAME-snt - section number and type, passed as the SNT arg, or |
-% empty for anchors. |
-% 3) NAME-pg - the page number. |
-% |
-% This is called from \donoderef, \anchor, and \dofloat. In the case of |
-% floats, there is an additional part, which is not written here: |
-% 4) NAME-lof - the text as it should appear in a @listoffloats. |
-% |
-\def\setref#1#2{% |
- \pdfmkdest{#1}% |
- \iflinks |
- {% |
- \atdummies % preserve commands, but don't expand them |
- \edef\writexrdef##1##2{% |
- \write\auxfile{@xrdef{#1-% #1 of \setref, expanded by the \edef |
- ##1}{##2}}% these are parameters of \writexrdef |
- }% |
- \toks0 = \expandafter{\lastsection}% |
- \immediate \writexrdef{title}{\the\toks0 }% |
- \immediate \writexrdef{snt}{\csname #2\endcsname}% \Ynumbered etc. |
- \safewhatsit{\writexrdef{pg}{\folio}}% will be written later, during \shipout |
- }% |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% @xref, @pxref, and @ref generate cross-references. For \xrefX, #1 is |
-% the node name, #2 the name of the Info cross-reference, #3 the printed |
-% node name, #4 the name of the Info file, #5 the name of the printed |
-% manual. All but the node name can be omitted. |
-% |
-\def\pxref#1{\putwordsee{} \xrefX[#1,,,,,,,]} |
-\def\xref#1{\putwordSee{} \xrefX[#1,,,,,,,]} |
-\def\ref#1{\xrefX[#1,,,,,,,]} |
-\def\xrefX[#1,#2,#3,#4,#5,#6]{\begingroup |
- \unsepspaces |
- \def\printedmanual{\ignorespaces #5}% |
- \def\printedrefname{\ignorespaces #3}% |
- \setbox1=\hbox{\printedmanual\unskip}% |
- \setbox0=\hbox{\printedrefname\unskip}% |
- \ifdim \wd0 = 0pt |
- % No printed node name was explicitly given. |
- \expandafter\ifx\csname SETxref-automatic-section-title\endcsname\relax |
- % Use the node name inside the square brackets. |
- \def\printedrefname{\ignorespaces #1}% |
- \else |
- % Use the actual chapter/section title appear inside |
- % the square brackets. Use the real section title if we have it. |
- \ifdim \wd1 > 0pt |
- % It is in another manual, so we don't have it. |
- \def\printedrefname{\ignorespaces #1}% |
- \else |
- \ifhavexrefs |
- % We know the real title if we have the xref values. |
- \def\printedrefname{\refx{#1-title}{}}% |
- \else |
- % Otherwise just copy the Info node name. |
- \def\printedrefname{\ignorespaces #1}% |
- \fi% |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- % |
- % Make link in pdf output. |
- \ifpdf |
- {\indexnofonts |
- \turnoffactive |
- % This expands tokens, so do it after making catcode changes, so _ |
- % etc. don't get their TeX definitions. |
- \getfilename{#4}% |
- % |
- % See comments at \activebackslashdouble. |
- {\activebackslashdouble \xdef\pdfxrefdest{#1}% |
- \backslashparens\pdfxrefdest}% |
- % |
- \leavevmode |
- \startlink attr{/Border [0 0 0]}% |
- \ifnum\filenamelength>0 |
- goto file{\the\filename.pdf} name{\pdfxrefdest}% |
- \else |
- goto name{\pdfmkpgn{\pdfxrefdest}}% |
- \fi |
- }% |
- \setcolor{\linkcolor}% |
- \fi |
- % |
- % Float references are printed completely differently: "Figure 1.2" |
- % instead of "[somenode], p.3". We distinguish them by the |
- % LABEL-title being set to a magic string. |
- {% |
- % Have to otherify everything special to allow the \csname to |
- % include an _ in the xref name, etc. |
- \indexnofonts |
- \turnoffactive |
- \expandafter\global\expandafter\let\expandafter\Xthisreftitle |
- \csname XR#1-title\endcsname |
- }% |
- \iffloat\Xthisreftitle |
- % If the user specified the print name (third arg) to the ref, |
- % print it instead of our usual "Figure 1.2". |
- \ifdim\wd0 = 0pt |
- \refx{#1-snt}{}% |
- \else |
- \printedrefname |
- \fi |
- % |
- % if the user also gave the printed manual name (fifth arg), append |
- % "in MANUALNAME". |
- \ifdim \wd1 > 0pt |
- \space \putwordin{} \cite{\printedmanual}% |
- \fi |
- \else |
- % node/anchor (non-float) references. |
- % |
- % If we use \unhbox0 and \unhbox1 to print the node names, TeX does not |
- % insert empty discretionaries after hyphens, which means that it will |
- % not find a line break at a hyphen in a node names. Since some manuals |
- % are best written with fairly long node names, containing hyphens, this |
- % is a loss. Therefore, we give the text of the node name again, so it |
- % is as if TeX is seeing it for the first time. |
- \ifdim \wd1 > 0pt |
- \putwordSection{} ``\printedrefname'' \putwordin{} \cite{\printedmanual}% |
- \else |
- % _ (for example) has to be the character _ for the purposes of the |
- % control sequence corresponding to the node, but it has to expand |
- % into the usual \leavevmode...\vrule stuff for purposes of |
- % printing. So we \turnoffactive for the \refx-snt, back on for the |
- % printing, back off for the \refx-pg. |
- {\turnoffactive |
- % Only output a following space if the -snt ref is nonempty; for |
- % @unnumbered and @anchor, it won't be. |
- \setbox2 = \hbox{\ignorespaces \refx{#1-snt}{}}% |
- \ifdim \wd2 > 0pt \refx{#1-snt}\space\fi |
- }% |
- % output the `[mynode]' via a macro so it can be overridden. |
- \xrefprintnodename\printedrefname |
- % |
- % But we always want a comma and a space: |
- ,\space |
- % |
- % output the `page 3'. |
- \turnoffactive \putwordpage\tie\refx{#1-pg}{}% |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \endlink |
-\endgroup} |
- |
-% This macro is called from \xrefX for the `[nodename]' part of xref |
-% output. It's a separate macro only so it can be changed more easily, |
-% since square brackets don't work well in some documents. Particularly |
-% one that Bob is working on :). |
-% |
-\def\xrefprintnodename#1{[#1]} |
- |
-% Things referred to by \setref. |
-% |
-\def\Ynothing{} |
-\def\Yomitfromtoc{} |
-\def\Ynumbered{% |
- \ifnum\secno=0 |
- \putwordChapter@tie \the\chapno |
- \else \ifnum\subsecno=0 |
- \putwordSection@tie \the\chapno.\the\secno |
- \else \ifnum\subsubsecno=0 |
- \putwordSection@tie \the\chapno.\the\secno.\the\subsecno |
- \else |
- \putwordSection@tie \the\chapno.\the\secno.\the\subsecno.\the\subsubsecno |
- \fi\fi\fi |
-} |
-\def\Yappendix{% |
- \ifnum\secno=0 |
- \putwordAppendix@tie @char\the\appendixno{}% |
- \else \ifnum\subsecno=0 |
- \putwordSection@tie @char\the\appendixno.\the\secno |
- \else \ifnum\subsubsecno=0 |
- \putwordSection@tie @char\the\appendixno.\the\secno.\the\subsecno |
- \else |
- \putwordSection@tie |
- @char\the\appendixno.\the\secno.\the\subsecno.\the\subsubsecno |
- \fi\fi\fi |
-} |
- |
-% Define \refx{NAME}{SUFFIX} to reference a cross-reference string named NAME. |
-% If its value is nonempty, SUFFIX is output afterward. |
-% |
-\def\refx#1#2{% |
- {% |
- \indexnofonts |
- \otherbackslash |
- \expandafter\global\expandafter\let\expandafter\thisrefX |
- \csname XR#1\endcsname |
- }% |
- \ifx\thisrefX\relax |
- % If not defined, say something at least. |
- \angleleft un\-de\-fined\angleright |
- \iflinks |
- \ifhavexrefs |
- \message{\linenumber Undefined cross reference `#1'.}% |
- \else |
- \ifwarnedxrefs\else |
- \global\warnedxrefstrue |
- \message{Cross reference values unknown; you must run TeX again.}% |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \fi |
- \else |
- % It's defined, so just use it. |
- \thisrefX |
- \fi |
- #2% Output the suffix in any case. |
-} |
- |
-% This is the macro invoked by entries in the aux file. Usually it's |
-% just a \def (we prepend XR to the control sequence name to avoid |
-% collisions). But if this is a float type, we have more work to do. |
-% |
-\def\xrdef#1#2{% |
- {% The node name might contain 8-bit characters, which in our current |
- % implementation are changed to commands like @'e. Don't let these |
- % mess up the control sequence name. |
- \indexnofonts |
- \turnoffactive |
- \xdef\safexrefname{#1}% |
- }% |
- % |
- \expandafter\gdef\csname XR\safexrefname\endcsname{#2}% remember this xref |
- % |
- % Was that xref control sequence that we just defined for a float? |
- \expandafter\iffloat\csname XR\safexrefname\endcsname |
- % it was a float, and we have the (safe) float type in \iffloattype. |
- \expandafter\let\expandafter\floatlist |
- \csname floatlist\iffloattype\endcsname |
- % |
- % Is this the first time we've seen this float type? |
- \expandafter\ifx\floatlist\relax |
- \toks0 = {\do}% yes, so just \do |
- \else |
- % had it before, so preserve previous elements in list. |
- \toks0 = \expandafter{\floatlist\do}% |
- \fi |
- % |
- % Remember this xref in the control sequence \floatlistFLOATTYPE, |
- % for later use in \listoffloats. |
- \expandafter\xdef\csname floatlist\iffloattype\endcsname{\the\toks0 |
- {\safexrefname}}% |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% Read the last existing aux file, if any. No error if none exists. |
-% |
-\def\tryauxfile{% |
- \openin 1 \jobname.aux |
- \ifeof 1 \else |
- \readdatafile{aux}% |
- \global\havexrefstrue |
- \fi |
- \closein 1 |
-} |
- |
-\def\setupdatafile{% |
- \catcode`\^^@=\other |
- \catcode`\^^A=\other |
- \catcode`\^^B=\other |
- \catcode`\^^C=\other |
- \catcode`\^^D=\other |
- \catcode`\^^E=\other |
- \catcode`\^^F=\other |
- \catcode`\^^G=\other |
- \catcode`\^^H=\other |
- \catcode`\^^K=\other |
- \catcode`\^^L=\other |
- \catcode`\^^N=\other |
- \catcode`\^^P=\other |
- \catcode`\^^Q=\other |
- \catcode`\^^R=\other |
- \catcode`\^^S=\other |
- \catcode`\^^T=\other |
- \catcode`\^^U=\other |
- \catcode`\^^V=\other |
- \catcode`\^^W=\other |
- \catcode`\^^X=\other |
- \catcode`\^^Z=\other |
- \catcode`\^^[=\other |
- \catcode`\^^\=\other |
- \catcode`\^^]=\other |
- \catcode`\^^^=\other |
- \catcode`\^^_=\other |
- % It was suggested to set the catcode of ^ to 7, which would allow ^^e4 etc. |
- % in xref tags, i.e., node names. But since ^^e4 notation isn't |
- % supported in the main text, it doesn't seem desirable. Furthermore, |
- % that is not enough: for node names that actually contain a ^ |
- % character, we would end up writing a line like this: 'xrdef {'hat |
- % b-title}{'hat b} and \xrdef does a \csname...\endcsname on the first |
- % argument, and \hat is not an expandable control sequence. It could |
- % all be worked out, but why? Either we support ^^ or we don't. |
- % |
- % The other change necessary for this was to define \auxhat: |
- % \def\auxhat{\def^{'hat }}% extra space so ok if followed by letter |
- % and then to call \auxhat in \setq. |
- % |
- \catcode`\^=\other |
- % |
- % Special characters. Should be turned off anyway, but... |
- \catcode`\~=\other |
- \catcode`\[=\other |
- \catcode`\]=\other |
- \catcode`\"=\other |
- \catcode`\_=\other |
- \catcode`\|=\other |
- \catcode`\<=\other |
- \catcode`\>=\other |
- \catcode`\$=\other |
- \catcode`\#=\other |
- \catcode`\&=\other |
- \catcode`\%=\other |
- \catcode`+=\other % avoid \+ for paranoia even though we've turned it off |
- % |
- % This is to support \ in node names and titles, since the \ |
- % characters end up in a \csname. It's easier than |
- % leaving it active and making its active definition an actual \ |
- % character. What I don't understand is why it works in the *value* |
- % of the xrdef. Seems like it should be a catcode12 \, and that |
- % should not typeset properly. But it works, so I'm moving on for |
- % now. --karl, 15jan04. |
- \catcode`\\=\other |
- % |
- % Make the characters 128-255 be printing characters. |
- {% |
- \count1=128 |
- \def\loop{% |
- \catcode\count1=\other |
- \advance\count1 by 1 |
- \ifnum \count1<256 \loop \fi |
- }% |
- }% |
- % |
- % @ is our escape character in .aux files, and we need braces. |
- \catcode`\{=1 |
- \catcode`\}=2 |
- \catcode`\@=0 |
-} |
- |
-\def\readdatafile#1{% |
-\begingroup |
- \setupdatafile |
- \input\jobname.#1 |
-\endgroup} |
- |
- |
-\message{insertions,} |
-% including footnotes. |
- |
-\newcount \footnoteno |
- |
-% The trailing space in the following definition for supereject is |
-% vital for proper filling; pages come out unaligned when you do a |
-% pagealignmacro call if that space before the closing brace is |
-% removed. (Generally, numeric constants should always be followed by a |
-% space to prevent strange expansion errors.) |
-\def\supereject{\par\penalty -20000\footnoteno =0 } |
- |
-% @footnotestyle is meaningful for info output only. |
-\let\footnotestyle=\comment |
- |
-{\catcode `\@=11 |
-% |
-% Auto-number footnotes. Otherwise like plain. |
-\gdef\footnote{% |
- \let\indent=\ptexindent |
- \let\noindent=\ptexnoindent |
- \global\advance\footnoteno by \@ne |
- \edef\thisfootno{$^{\the\footnoteno}$}% |
- % |
- % In case the footnote comes at the end of a sentence, preserve the |
- % extra spacing after we do the footnote number. |
- \let\@sf\empty |
- \ifhmode\edef\@sf{\spacefactor\the\spacefactor}\ptexslash\fi |
- % |
- % Remove inadvertent blank space before typesetting the footnote number. |
- \unskip |
- \thisfootno\@sf |
- \dofootnote |
-}% |
- |
-% Don't bother with the trickery in plain.tex to not require the |
-% footnote text as a parameter. Our footnotes don't need to be so general. |
-% |
-% Oh yes, they do; otherwise, @ifset (and anything else that uses |
-% \parseargline) fails inside footnotes because the tokens are fixed when |
-% the footnote is read. --karl, 16nov96. |
-% |
-\gdef\dofootnote{% |
- \insert\footins\bgroup |
- % We want to typeset this text as a normal paragraph, even if the |
- % footnote reference occurs in (for example) a display environment. |
- % So reset some parameters. |
- \hsize=\pagewidth |
- \interlinepenalty\interfootnotelinepenalty |
- \splittopskip\ht\strutbox % top baseline for broken footnotes |
- \splitmaxdepth\dp\strutbox |
- \floatingpenalty\@MM |
- \leftskip\z@skip |
- \rightskip\z@skip |
- \spaceskip\z@skip |
- \xspaceskip\z@skip |
- \parindent\defaultparindent |
- % |
- \smallfonts \rm |
- % |
- % Because we use hanging indentation in footnotes, a @noindent appears |
- % to exdent this text, so make it be a no-op. makeinfo does not use |
- % hanging indentation so @noindent can still be needed within footnote |
- % text after an @example or the like (not that this is good style). |
- \let\noindent = \relax |
- % |
- % Hang the footnote text off the number. Use \everypar in case the |
- % footnote extends for more than one paragraph. |
- \everypar = {\hang}% |
- \textindent{\thisfootno}% |
- % |
- % Don't crash into the line above the footnote text. Since this |
- % expands into a box, it must come within the paragraph, lest it |
- % provide a place where TeX can split the footnote. |
- \footstrut |
- \futurelet\next\fo@t |
-} |
-}%end \catcode `\@=11 |
- |
-% In case a @footnote appears in a vbox, save the footnote text and create |
-% the real \insert just after the vbox finished. Otherwise, the insertion |
-% would be lost. |
-% Similarly, if a @footnote appears inside an alignment, save the footnote |
-% text to a box and make the \insert when a row of the table is finished. |
-% And the same can be done for other insert classes. --kasal, 16nov03. |
- |
-% Replace the \insert primitive by a cheating macro. |
-% Deeper inside, just make sure that the saved insertions are not spilled |
-% out prematurely. |
-% |
-\def\startsavinginserts{% |
- \ifx \insert\ptexinsert |
- \let\insert\saveinsert |
- \else |
- \let\checkinserts\relax |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% This \insert replacement works for both \insert\footins{foo} and |
-% \insert\footins\bgroup foo\egroup, but it doesn't work for \insert27{foo}. |
-% |
-\def\saveinsert#1{% |
- \edef\next{\noexpand\savetobox \makeSAVEname#1}% |
- \afterassignment\next |
- % swallow the left brace |
- \let\temp = |
-} |
-\def\makeSAVEname#1{\makecsname{SAVE\expandafter\gobble\string#1}} |
-\def\savetobox#1{\global\setbox#1 = \vbox\bgroup \unvbox#1} |
- |
-\def\checksaveins#1{\ifvoid#1\else \placesaveins#1\fi} |
- |
-\def\placesaveins#1{% |
- \ptexinsert \csname\expandafter\gobblesave\string#1\endcsname |
- {\box#1}% |
-} |
- |
-% eat @SAVE -- beware, all of them have catcode \other: |
-{ |
- \def\dospecials{\do S\do A\do V\do E} \uncatcodespecials % ;-) |
- \gdef\gobblesave @SAVE{} |
-} |
- |
-% initialization: |
-\def\newsaveins #1{% |
- \edef\next{\noexpand\newsaveinsX \makeSAVEname#1}% |
- \next |
-} |
-\def\newsaveinsX #1{% |
- \csname newbox\endcsname #1% |
- \expandafter\def\expandafter\checkinserts\expandafter{\checkinserts |
- \checksaveins #1}% |
-} |
- |
-% initialize: |
-\let\checkinserts\empty |
-\newsaveins\footins |
-\newsaveins\margin |
- |
- |
-% @image. We use the macros from epsf.tex to support this. |
-% If epsf.tex is not installed and @image is used, we complain. |
-% |
-% Check for and read epsf.tex up front. If we read it only at @image |
-% time, we might be inside a group, and then its definitions would get |
-% undone and the next image would fail. |
-\openin 1 = epsf.tex |
-\ifeof 1 \else |
- % Do not bother showing banner with epsf.tex v2.7k (available in |
- % doc/epsf.tex and on ctan). |
- \def\epsfannounce{\toks0 = }% |
- \input epsf.tex |
-\fi |
-\closein 1 |
-% |
-% We will only complain once about lack of epsf.tex. |
-\newif\ifwarnednoepsf |
-\newhelp\noepsfhelp{epsf.tex must be installed for images to |
- work. It is also included in the Texinfo distribution, or you can get |
- it from ftp://tug.org/tex/epsf.tex.} |
-% |
-\def\image#1{% |
- \ifx\epsfbox\undefined |
- \ifwarnednoepsf \else |
- \errhelp = \noepsfhelp |
- \errmessage{epsf.tex not found, images will be ignored}% |
- \global\warnednoepsftrue |
- \fi |
- \else |
- \imagexxx #1,,,,,\finish |
- \fi |
-} |
-% |
-% Arguments to @image: |
-% #1 is (mandatory) image filename; we tack on .eps extension. |
-% #2 is (optional) width, #3 is (optional) height. |
-% #4 is (ignored optional) html alt text. |
-% #5 is (ignored optional) extension. |
-% #6 is just the usual extra ignored arg for parsing this stuff. |
-\newif\ifimagevmode |
-\def\imagexxx#1,#2,#3,#4,#5,#6\finish{\begingroup |
- \catcode`\^^M = 5 % in case we're inside an example |
- \normalturnoffactive % allow _ et al. in names |
- % If the image is by itself, center it. |
- \ifvmode |
- \imagevmodetrue |
- \nobreak\medskip |
- % Usually we'll have text after the image which will insert |
- % \parskip glue, so insert it here too to equalize the space |
- % above and below. |
- \nobreak\vskip\parskip |
- \nobreak |
- \fi |
- % |
- % Leave vertical mode so that indentation from an enclosing |
- % environment such as @quotation is respected. On the other hand, if |
- % it's at the top level, we don't want the normal paragraph indentation. |
- \noindent |
- % |
- % Output the image. |
- \ifpdf |
- \dopdfimage{#1}{#2}{#3}% |
- \else |
- % \epsfbox itself resets \epsf?size at each figure. |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #2}\ifdim\wd0 > 0pt \epsfxsize=#2\relax \fi |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #3}\ifdim\wd0 > 0pt \epsfysize=#3\relax \fi |
- \epsfbox{#1.eps}% |
- \fi |
- % |
- \ifimagevmode \medskip \fi % space after the standalone image |
-\endgroup} |
- |
- |
-% @float FLOATTYPE,LABEL,LOC ... @end float for displayed figures, tables, |
-% etc. We don't actually implement floating yet, we always include the |
-% float "here". But it seemed the best name for the future. |
-% |
-\envparseargdef\float{\eatcommaspace\eatcommaspace\dofloat#1, , ,\finish} |
- |
-% There may be a space before second and/or third parameter; delete it. |
-\def\eatcommaspace#1, {#1,} |
- |
-% #1 is the optional FLOATTYPE, the text label for this float, typically |
-% "Figure", "Table", "Example", etc. Can't contain commas. If omitted, |
-% this float will not be numbered and cannot be referred to. |
-% |
-% #2 is the optional xref label. Also must be present for the float to |
-% be referable. |
-% |
-% #3 is the optional positioning argument; for now, it is ignored. It |
-% will somehow specify the positions allowed to float to (here, top, bottom). |
-% |
-% We keep a separate counter for each FLOATTYPE, which we reset at each |
-% chapter-level command. |
-\let\resetallfloatnos=\empty |
-% |
-\def\dofloat#1,#2,#3,#4\finish{% |
- \let\thiscaption=\empty |
- \let\thisshortcaption=\empty |
- % |
- % don't lose footnotes inside @float. |
- % |
- % BEWARE: when the floats start float, we have to issue warning whenever an |
- % insert appears inside a float which could possibly float. --kasal, 26may04 |
- % |
- \startsavinginserts |
- % |
- % We can't be used inside a paragraph. |
- \par |
- % |
- \vtop\bgroup |
- \def\floattype{#1}% |
- \def\floatlabel{#2}% |
- \def\floatloc{#3}% we do nothing with this yet. |
- % |
- \ifx\floattype\empty |
- \let\safefloattype=\empty |
- \else |
- {% |
- % the floattype might have accents or other special characters, |
- % but we need to use it in a control sequence name. |
- \indexnofonts |
- \turnoffactive |
- \xdef\safefloattype{\floattype}% |
- }% |
- \fi |
- % |
- % If label is given but no type, we handle that as the empty type. |
- \ifx\floatlabel\empty \else |
- % We want each FLOATTYPE to be numbered separately (Figure 1, |
- % Table 1, Figure 2, ...). (And if no label, no number.) |
- % |
- \expandafter\getfloatno\csname\safefloattype floatno\endcsname |
- \global\advance\floatno by 1 |
- % |
- {% |
- % This magic value for \lastsection is output by \setref as the |
- % XREFLABEL-title value. \xrefX uses it to distinguish float |
- % labels (which have a completely different output format) from |
- % node and anchor labels. And \xrdef uses it to construct the |
- % lists of floats. |
- % |
- \edef\lastsection{\floatmagic=\safefloattype}% |
- \setref{\floatlabel}{Yfloat}% |
- }% |
- \fi |
- % |
- % start with \parskip glue, I guess. |
- \vskip\parskip |
- % |
- % Don't suppress indentation if a float happens to start a section. |
- \restorefirstparagraphindent |
-} |
- |
-% we have these possibilities: |
-% @float Foo,lbl & @caption{Cap}: Foo 1.1: Cap |
-% @float Foo,lbl & no caption: Foo 1.1 |
-% @float Foo & @caption{Cap}: Foo: Cap |
-% @float Foo & no caption: Foo |
-% @float ,lbl & Caption{Cap}: 1.1: Cap |
-% @float ,lbl & no caption: 1.1 |
-% @float & @caption{Cap}: Cap |
-% @float & no caption: |
-% |
-\def\Efloat{% |
- \let\floatident = \empty |
- % |
- % In all cases, if we have a float type, it comes first. |
- \ifx\floattype\empty \else \def\floatident{\floattype}\fi |
- % |
- % If we have an xref label, the number comes next. |
- \ifx\floatlabel\empty \else |
- \ifx\floattype\empty \else % if also had float type, need tie first. |
- \appendtomacro\floatident{\tie}% |
- \fi |
- % the number. |
- \appendtomacro\floatident{\chaplevelprefix\the\floatno}% |
- \fi |
- % |
- % Start the printed caption with what we've constructed in |
- % \floatident, but keep it separate; we need \floatident again. |
- \let\captionline = \floatident |
- % |
- \ifx\thiscaption\empty \else |
- \ifx\floatident\empty \else |
- \appendtomacro\captionline{: }% had ident, so need a colon between |
- \fi |
- % |
- % caption text. |
- \appendtomacro\captionline{\scanexp\thiscaption}% |
- \fi |
- % |
- % If we have anything to print, print it, with space before. |
- % Eventually this needs to become an \insert. |
- \ifx\captionline\empty \else |
- \vskip.5\parskip |
- \captionline |
- % |
- % Space below caption. |
- \vskip\parskip |
- \fi |
- % |
- % If have an xref label, write the list of floats info. Do this |
- % after the caption, to avoid chance of it being a breakpoint. |
- \ifx\floatlabel\empty \else |
- % Write the text that goes in the lof to the aux file as |
- % \floatlabel-lof. Besides \floatident, we include the short |
- % caption if specified, else the full caption if specified, else nothing. |
- {% |
- \atdummies |
- % |
- % since we read the caption text in the macro world, where ^^M |
- % is turned into a normal character, we have to scan it back, so |
- % we don't write the literal three characters "^^M" into the aux file. |
- \scanexp{% |
- \xdef\noexpand\gtemp{% |
- \ifx\thisshortcaption\empty |
- \thiscaption |
- \else |
- \thisshortcaption |
- \fi |
- }% |
- }% |
- \immediate\write\auxfile{@xrdef{\floatlabel-lof}{\floatident |
- \ifx\gtemp\empty \else : \gtemp \fi}}% |
- }% |
- \fi |
- \egroup % end of \vtop |
- % |
- % place the captured inserts |
- % |
- % BEWARE: when the floats start floating, we have to issue warning |
- % whenever an insert appears inside a float which could possibly |
- % float. --kasal, 26may04 |
- % |
- \checkinserts |
-} |
- |
-% Append the tokens #2 to the definition of macro #1, not expanding either. |
-% |
-\def\appendtomacro#1#2{% |
- \expandafter\def\expandafter#1\expandafter{#1#2}% |
-} |
- |
-% @caption, @shortcaption |
-% |
-\def\caption{\docaption\thiscaption} |
-\def\shortcaption{\docaption\thisshortcaption} |
-\def\docaption{\checkenv\float \bgroup\scanargctxt\defcaption} |
-\def\defcaption#1#2{\egroup \def#1{#2}} |
- |
-% The parameter is the control sequence identifying the counter we are |
-% going to use. Create it if it doesn't exist and assign it to \floatno. |
-\def\getfloatno#1{% |
- \ifx#1\relax |
- % Haven't seen this figure type before. |
- \csname newcount\endcsname #1% |
- % |
- % Remember to reset this floatno at the next chap. |
- \expandafter\gdef\expandafter\resetallfloatnos |
- \expandafter{\resetallfloatnos #1=0 }% |
- \fi |
- \let\floatno#1% |
-} |
- |
-% \setref calls this to get the XREFLABEL-snt value. We want an @xref |
-% to the FLOATLABEL to expand to "Figure 3.1". We call \setref when we |
-% first read the @float command. |
-% |
-\def\Yfloat{\floattype@tie \chaplevelprefix\the\floatno}% |
- |
-% Magic string used for the XREFLABEL-title value, so \xrefX can |
-% distinguish floats from other xref types. |
-\def\floatmagic{!!float!!} |
- |
-% #1 is the control sequence we are passed; we expand into a conditional |
-% which is true if #1 represents a float ref. That is, the magic |
-% \lastsection value which we \setref above. |
-% |
-\def\iffloat#1{\expandafter\doiffloat#1==\finish} |
-% |
-% #1 is (maybe) the \floatmagic string. If so, #2 will be the |
-% (safe) float type for this float. We set \iffloattype to #2. |
-% |
-\def\doiffloat#1=#2=#3\finish{% |
- \def\temp{#1}% |
- \def\iffloattype{#2}% |
- \ifx\temp\floatmagic |
-} |
- |
-% @listoffloats FLOATTYPE - print a list of floats like a table of contents. |
-% |
-\parseargdef\listoffloats{% |
- \def\floattype{#1}% floattype |
- {% |
- % the floattype might have accents or other special characters, |
- % but we need to use it in a control sequence name. |
- \indexnofonts |
- \turnoffactive |
- \xdef\safefloattype{\floattype}% |
- }% |
- % |
- % \xrdef saves the floats as a \do-list in \floatlistSAFEFLOATTYPE. |
- \expandafter\ifx\csname floatlist\safefloattype\endcsname \relax |
- \ifhavexrefs |
- % if the user said @listoffloats foo but never @float foo. |
- \message{\linenumber No `\safefloattype' floats to list.}% |
- \fi |
- \else |
- \begingroup |
- \leftskip=\tocindent % indent these entries like a toc |
- \let\do=\listoffloatsdo |
- \csname floatlist\safefloattype\endcsname |
- \endgroup |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% This is called on each entry in a list of floats. We're passed the |
-% xref label, in the form LABEL-title, which is how we save it in the |
-% aux file. We strip off the -title and look up \XRLABEL-lof, which |
-% has the text we're supposed to typeset here. |
-% |
-% Figures without xref labels will not be included in the list (since |
-% they won't appear in the aux file). |
-% |
-\def\listoffloatsdo#1{\listoffloatsdoentry#1\finish} |
-\def\listoffloatsdoentry#1-title\finish{{% |
- % Can't fully expand XR#1-lof because it can contain anything. Just |
- % pass the control sequence. On the other hand, XR#1-pg is just the |
- % page number, and we want to fully expand that so we can get a link |
- % in pdf output. |
- \toksA = \expandafter{\csname XR#1-lof\endcsname}% |
- % |
- % use the same \entry macro we use to generate the TOC and index. |
- \edef\writeentry{\noexpand\entry{\the\toksA}{\csname XR#1-pg\endcsname}}% |
- \writeentry |
-}} |
- |
- |
-\message{localization,} |
- |
-% @documentlanguage is usually given very early, just after |
-% @setfilename. If done too late, it may not override everything |
-% properly. Single argument is the language (de) or locale (de_DE) |
-% abbreviation. It would be nice if we could set up a hyphenation file. |
-% |
-{ |
- \catcode`\_ = \active |
- \globaldefs=1 |
-\parseargdef\documentlanguage{\begingroup |
- \let_=\normalunderscore % normal _ character for filenames |
- \tex % read txi-??.tex file in plain TeX. |
- % Read the file by the name they passed if it exists. |
- \openin 1 txi-#1.tex |
- \ifeof 1 |
- \documentlanguagetrywithoutunderscore{#1_\finish}% |
- \else |
- \input txi-#1.tex |
- \fi |
- \closein 1 |
- \endgroup |
-\endgroup} |
-} |
-% |
-% If they passed de_DE, and txi-de_DE.tex doesn't exist, |
-% try txi-de.tex. |
-% |
-\def\documentlanguagetrywithoutunderscore#1_#2\finish{% |
- \openin 1 txi-#1.tex |
- \ifeof 1 |
- \errhelp = \nolanghelp |
- \errmessage{Cannot read language file txi-#1.tex}% |
- \else |
- \input txi-#1.tex |
- \fi |
- \closein 1 |
-} |
-% |
-\newhelp\nolanghelp{The given language definition file cannot be found or |
-is empty. Maybe you need to install it? In the current directory |
-should work if nowhere else does.} |
- |
-% Set the catcode of characters 128 through 255 to the specified number. |
-% |
-\def\setnonasciicharscatcode#1{% |
- \count255=128 |
- \loop\ifnum\count255<256 |
- \global\catcode\count255=#1\relax |
- \advance\count255 by 1 |
- \repeat |
-} |
- |
-\def\setnonasciicharscatcodenonglobal#1{% |
- \count255=128 |
- \loop\ifnum\count255<256 |
- \catcode\count255=#1\relax |
- \advance\count255 by 1 |
- \repeat |
-} |
- |
-% @documentencoding sets the definition of non-ASCII characters |
-% according to the specified encoding. |
-% |
-\parseargdef\documentencoding{% |
- % Encoding being declared for the document. |
- \def\declaredencoding{\csname #1.enc\endcsname}% |
- % |
- % Supported encodings: names converted to tokens in order to be able |
- % to compare them with \ifx. |
- \def\ascii{\csname US-ASCII.enc\endcsname}% |
- \def\latnine{\csname ISO-8859-15.enc\endcsname}% |
- \def\latone{\csname ISO-8859-1.enc\endcsname}% |
- \def\lattwo{\csname ISO-8859-2.enc\endcsname}% |
- \def\utfeight{\csname UTF-8.enc\endcsname}% |
- % |
- \ifx \declaredencoding \ascii |
- \asciichardefs |
- % |
- \else \ifx \declaredencoding \lattwo |
- \setnonasciicharscatcode\active |
- \lattwochardefs |
- % |
- \else \ifx \declaredencoding \latone |
- \setnonasciicharscatcode\active |
- \latonechardefs |
- % |
- \else \ifx \declaredencoding \latnine |
- \setnonasciicharscatcode\active |
- \latninechardefs |
- % |
- \else \ifx \declaredencoding \utfeight |
- \setnonasciicharscatcode\active |
- \utfeightchardefs |
- % |
- \else |
- \message{Unknown document encoding #1, ignoring.}% |
- % |
- \fi % utfeight |
- \fi % latnine |
- \fi % latone |
- \fi % lattwo |
- \fi % ascii |
-} |
- |
-% A message to be logged when using a character that isn't available |
-% the default font encoding (OT1). |
-% |
-\def\missingcharmsg#1{\message{Character missing in OT1 encoding: #1.}} |
- |
-% Take account of \c (plain) vs. \, (Texinfo) difference. |
-\def\cedilla#1{\ifx\c\ptexc\c{#1}\else\,{#1}\fi} |
- |
-% First, make active non-ASCII characters in order for them to be |
-% correctly categorized when TeX reads the replacement text of |
-% macros containing the character definitions. |
-\setnonasciicharscatcode\active |
-% |
-% Latin1 (ISO-8859-1) character definitions. |
-\def\latonechardefs{% |
- \gdef^^a0{~} |
- \gdef^^a1{\exclamdown} |
- \gdef^^a2{\missingcharmsg{CENT SIGN}} |
- \gdef^^a3{{\pounds}} |
- \gdef^^a4{\missingcharmsg{CURRENCY SIGN}} |
- \gdef^^a5{\missingcharmsg{YEN SIGN}} |
- \gdef^^a6{\missingcharmsg{BROKEN BAR}} |
- \gdef^^a7{\S} |
- \gdef^^a8{\"{}} |
- \gdef^^a9{\copyright} |
- \gdef^^aa{\ordf} |
- \gdef^^ab{\missingcharmsg{LEFT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK}} |
- \gdef^^ac{$\lnot$} |
- \gdef^^ad{\-} |
- \gdef^^ae{\registeredsymbol} |
- \gdef^^af{\={}} |
- % |
- \gdef^^b0{\textdegree} |
- \gdef^^b1{$\pm$} |
- \gdef^^b2{$^2$} |
- \gdef^^b3{$^3$} |
- \gdef^^b4{\'{}} |
- \gdef^^b5{$\mu$} |
- \gdef^^b6{\P} |
- % |
- \gdef^^b7{$^.$} |
- \gdef^^b8{\cedilla\ } |
- \gdef^^b9{$^1$} |
- \gdef^^ba{\ordm} |
- % |
- \gdef^^bb{\missingcharmsg{RIGHT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK}} |
- \gdef^^bc{$1\over4$} |
- \gdef^^bd{$1\over2$} |
- \gdef^^be{$3\over4$} |
- \gdef^^bf{\questiondown} |
- % |
- \gdef^^c0{\`A} |
- \gdef^^c1{\'A} |
- \gdef^^c2{\^A} |
- \gdef^^c3{\~A} |
- \gdef^^c4{\"A} |
- \gdef^^c5{\ringaccent A} |
- \gdef^^c6{\AE} |
- \gdef^^c7{\cedilla C} |
- \gdef^^c8{\`E} |
- \gdef^^c9{\'E} |
- \gdef^^ca{\^E} |
- \gdef^^cb{\"E} |
- \gdef^^cc{\`I} |
- \gdef^^cd{\'I} |
- \gdef^^ce{\^I} |
- \gdef^^cf{\"I} |
- % |
- \gdef^^d0{\missingcharmsg{LATIN CAPITAL LETTER ETH}} |
- \gdef^^d1{\~N} |
- \gdef^^d2{\`O} |
- \gdef^^d3{\'O} |
- \gdef^^d4{\^O} |
- \gdef^^d5{\~O} |
- \gdef^^d6{\"O} |
- \gdef^^d7{$\times$} |
- \gdef^^d8{\O} |
- \gdef^^d9{\`U} |
- \gdef^^da{\'U} |
- \gdef^^db{\^U} |
- \gdef^^dc{\"U} |
- \gdef^^dd{\'Y} |
- \gdef^^de{\missingcharmsg{LATIN CAPITAL LETTER THORN}} |
- \gdef^^df{\ss} |
- % |
- \gdef^^e0{\`a} |
- \gdef^^e1{\'a} |
- \gdef^^e2{\^a} |
- \gdef^^e3{\~a} |
- \gdef^^e4{\"a} |
- \gdef^^e5{\ringaccent a} |
- \gdef^^e6{\ae} |
- \gdef^^e7{\cedilla c} |
- \gdef^^e8{\`e} |
- \gdef^^e9{\'e} |
- \gdef^^ea{\^e} |
- \gdef^^eb{\"e} |
- \gdef^^ec{\`{\dotless i}} |
- \gdef^^ed{\'{\dotless i}} |
- \gdef^^ee{\^{\dotless i}} |
- \gdef^^ef{\"{\dotless i}} |
- % |
- \gdef^^f0{\missingcharmsg{LATIN SMALL LETTER ETH}} |
- \gdef^^f1{\~n} |
- \gdef^^f2{\`o} |
- \gdef^^f3{\'o} |
- \gdef^^f4{\^o} |
- \gdef^^f5{\~o} |
- \gdef^^f6{\"o} |
- \gdef^^f7{$\div$} |
- \gdef^^f8{\o} |
- \gdef^^f9{\`u} |
- \gdef^^fa{\'u} |
- \gdef^^fb{\^u} |
- \gdef^^fc{\"u} |
- \gdef^^fd{\'y} |
- \gdef^^fe{\missingcharmsg{LATIN SMALL LETTER THORN}} |
- \gdef^^ff{\"y} |
-} |
- |
-% Latin9 (ISO-8859-15) encoding character definitions. |
-\def\latninechardefs{% |
- % Encoding is almost identical to Latin1. |
- \latonechardefs |
- % |
- \gdef^^a4{\euro} |
- \gdef^^a6{\v S} |
- \gdef^^a8{\v s} |
- \gdef^^b4{\v Z} |
- \gdef^^b8{\v z} |
- \gdef^^bc{\OE} |
- \gdef^^bd{\oe} |
- \gdef^^be{\"Y} |
-} |
- |
-% Latin2 (ISO-8859-2) character definitions. |
-\def\lattwochardefs{% |
- \gdef^^a0{~} |
- \gdef^^a1{\missingcharmsg{LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH OGONEK}} |
- \gdef^^a2{\u{}} |
- \gdef^^a3{\L} |
- \gdef^^a4{\missingcharmsg{CURRENCY SIGN}} |
- \gdef^^a5{\v L} |
- \gdef^^a6{\'S} |
- \gdef^^a7{\S} |
- \gdef^^a8{\"{}} |
- \gdef^^a9{\v S} |
- \gdef^^aa{\cedilla S} |
- \gdef^^ab{\v T} |
- \gdef^^ac{\'Z} |
- \gdef^^ad{\-} |
- \gdef^^ae{\v Z} |
- \gdef^^af{\dotaccent Z} |
- % |
- \gdef^^b0{\textdegree} |
- \gdef^^b1{\missingcharmsg{LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH OGONEK}} |
- \gdef^^b2{\missingcharmsg{OGONEK}} |
- \gdef^^b3{\l} |
- \gdef^^b4{\'{}} |
- \gdef^^b5{\v l} |
- \gdef^^b6{\'s} |
- \gdef^^b7{\v{}} |
- \gdef^^b8{\cedilla\ } |
- \gdef^^b9{\v s} |
- \gdef^^ba{\cedilla s} |
- \gdef^^bb{\v t} |
- \gdef^^bc{\'z} |
- \gdef^^bd{\H{}} |
- \gdef^^be{\v z} |
- \gdef^^bf{\dotaccent z} |
- % |
- \gdef^^c0{\'R} |
- \gdef^^c1{\'A} |
- \gdef^^c2{\^A} |
- \gdef^^c3{\u A} |
- \gdef^^c4{\"A} |
- \gdef^^c5{\'L} |
- \gdef^^c6{\'C} |
- \gdef^^c7{\cedilla C} |
- \gdef^^c8{\v C} |
- \gdef^^c9{\'E} |
- \gdef^^ca{\missingcharmsg{LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH OGONEK}} |
- \gdef^^cb{\"E} |
- \gdef^^cc{\v E} |
- \gdef^^cd{\'I} |
- \gdef^^ce{\^I} |
- \gdef^^cf{\v D} |
- % |
- \gdef^^d0{\missingcharmsg{LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH STROKE}} |
- \gdef^^d1{\'N} |
- \gdef^^d2{\v N} |
- \gdef^^d3{\'O} |
- \gdef^^d4{\^O} |
- \gdef^^d5{\H O} |
- \gdef^^d6{\"O} |
- \gdef^^d7{$\times$} |
- \gdef^^d8{\v R} |
- \gdef^^d9{\ringaccent U} |
- \gdef^^da{\'U} |
- \gdef^^db{\H U} |
- \gdef^^dc{\"U} |
- \gdef^^dd{\'Y} |
- \gdef^^de{\cedilla T} |
- \gdef^^df{\ss} |
- % |
- \gdef^^e0{\'r} |
- \gdef^^e1{\'a} |
- \gdef^^e2{\^a} |
- \gdef^^e3{\u a} |
- \gdef^^e4{\"a} |
- \gdef^^e5{\'l} |
- \gdef^^e6{\'c} |
- \gdef^^e7{\cedilla c} |
- \gdef^^e8{\v c} |
- \gdef^^e9{\'e} |
- \gdef^^ea{\missingcharmsg{LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH OGONEK}} |
- \gdef^^eb{\"e} |
- \gdef^^ec{\v e} |
- \gdef^^ed{\'\i} |
- \gdef^^ee{\^\i} |
- \gdef^^ef{\v d} |
- % |
- \gdef^^f0{\missingcharmsg{LATIN SMALL LETTER D WITH STROKE}} |
- \gdef^^f1{\'n} |
- \gdef^^f2{\v n} |
- \gdef^^f3{\'o} |
- \gdef^^f4{\^o} |
- \gdef^^f5{\H o} |
- \gdef^^f6{\"o} |
- \gdef^^f7{$\div$} |
- \gdef^^f8{\v r} |
- \gdef^^f9{\ringaccent u} |
- \gdef^^fa{\'u} |
- \gdef^^fb{\H u} |
- \gdef^^fc{\"u} |
- \gdef^^fd{\'y} |
- \gdef^^fe{\cedilla t} |
- \gdef^^ff{\dotaccent{}} |
-} |
- |
-% UTF-8 character definitions. |
-% |
-% This code to support UTF-8 is based on LaTeX's utf8.def, with some |
-% changes for Texinfo conventions. It is included here under the GPL by |
-% permission from Frank Mittelbach and the LaTeX team. |
-% |
-\newcount\countUTFx |
-\newcount\countUTFy |
-\newcount\countUTFz |
- |
-\gdef\UTFviiiTwoOctets#1#2{\expandafter |
- \UTFviiiDefined\csname u8:#1\string #2\endcsname} |
-% |
-\gdef\UTFviiiThreeOctets#1#2#3{\expandafter |
- \UTFviiiDefined\csname u8:#1\string #2\string #3\endcsname} |
-% |
-\gdef\UTFviiiFourOctets#1#2#3#4{\expandafter |
- \UTFviiiDefined\csname u8:#1\string #2\string #3\string #4\endcsname} |
- |
-\gdef\UTFviiiDefined#1{% |
- \ifx #1\relax |
- \message{\linenumber Unicode char \string #1 not defined for Texinfo}% |
- \else |
- \expandafter #1% |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-\begingroup |
- \catcode`\~13 |
- \catcode`\"12 |
- |
- \def\UTFviiiLoop{% |
- \global\catcode\countUTFx\active |
- \uccode`\~\countUTFx |
- \uppercase\expandafter{\UTFviiiTmp}% |
- \advance\countUTFx by 1 |
- \ifnum\countUTFx < \countUTFy |
- \expandafter\UTFviiiLoop |
- \fi} |
- |
- \countUTFx = "C2 |
- \countUTFy = "E0 |
- \def\UTFviiiTmp{% |
- \xdef~{\noexpand\UTFviiiTwoOctets\string~}} |
- \UTFviiiLoop |
- |
- \countUTFx = "E0 |
- \countUTFy = "F0 |
- \def\UTFviiiTmp{% |
- \xdef~{\noexpand\UTFviiiThreeOctets\string~}} |
- \UTFviiiLoop |
- |
- \countUTFx = "F0 |
- \countUTFy = "F4 |
- \def\UTFviiiTmp{% |
- \xdef~{\noexpand\UTFviiiFourOctets\string~}} |
- \UTFviiiLoop |
-\endgroup |
- |
-\begingroup |
- \catcode`\"=12 |
- \catcode`\<=12 |
- \catcode`\.=12 |
- \catcode`\,=12 |
- \catcode`\;=12 |
- \catcode`\!=12 |
- \catcode`\~=13 |
- |
- \gdef\DeclareUnicodeCharacter#1#2{% |
- \countUTFz = "#1\relax |
- \wlog{\space\space defining Unicode char U+#1 (decimal \the\countUTFz)}% |
- \begingroup |
- \parseXMLCharref |
- \def\UTFviiiTwoOctets##1##2{% |
- \csname u8:##1\string ##2\endcsname}% |
- \def\UTFviiiThreeOctets##1##2##3{% |
- \csname u8:##1\string ##2\string ##3\endcsname}% |
- \def\UTFviiiFourOctets##1##2##3##4{% |
- \csname u8:##1\string ##2\string ##3\string ##4\endcsname}% |
- \expandafter\expandafter\expandafter\expandafter |
- \expandafter\expandafter\expandafter |
- \gdef\UTFviiiTmp{#2}% |
- \endgroup} |
- |
- \gdef\parseXMLCharref{% |
- \ifnum\countUTFz < "A0\relax |
- \errhelp = \EMsimple |
- \errmessage{Cannot define Unicode char value < 00A0}% |
- \else\ifnum\countUTFz < "800\relax |
- \parseUTFviiiA,% |
- \parseUTFviiiB C\UTFviiiTwoOctets.,% |
- \else\ifnum\countUTFz < "10000\relax |
- \parseUTFviiiA;% |
- \parseUTFviiiA,% |
- \parseUTFviiiB E\UTFviiiThreeOctets.{,;}% |
- \else |
- \parseUTFviiiA;% |
- \parseUTFviiiA,% |
- \parseUTFviiiA!% |
- \parseUTFviiiB F\UTFviiiFourOctets.{!,;}% |
- \fi\fi\fi |
- } |
- |
- \gdef\parseUTFviiiA#1{% |
- \countUTFx = \countUTFz |
- \divide\countUTFz by 64 |
- \countUTFy = \countUTFz |
- \multiply\countUTFz by 64 |
- \advance\countUTFx by -\countUTFz |
- \advance\countUTFx by 128 |
- \uccode `#1\countUTFx |
- \countUTFz = \countUTFy} |
- |
- \gdef\parseUTFviiiB#1#2#3#4{% |
- \advance\countUTFz by "#10\relax |
- \uccode `#3\countUTFz |
- \uppercase{\gdef\UTFviiiTmp{#2#3#4}}} |
-\endgroup |
- |
-\def\utfeightchardefs{% |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00A0}{\tie} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00A1}{\exclamdown} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00A3}{\pounds} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00A8}{\"{ }} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00A9}{\copyright} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00AA}{\ordf} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00AB}{\guillemetleft} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00AD}{\-} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00AE}{\registeredsymbol} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00AF}{\={ }} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00B0}{\ringaccent{ }} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00B4}{\'{ }} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00B8}{\cedilla{ }} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00BA}{\ordm} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00BB}{\guillemetright} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00BF}{\questiondown} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00C0}{\`A} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00C1}{\'A} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00C2}{\^A} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00C3}{\~A} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00C4}{\"A} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00C5}{\AA} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00C6}{\AE} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00C7}{\cedilla{C}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00C8}{\`E} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00C9}{\'E} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00CA}{\^E} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00CB}{\"E} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00CC}{\`I} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00CD}{\'I} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00CE}{\^I} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00CF}{\"I} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00D1}{\~N} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00D2}{\`O} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00D3}{\'O} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00D4}{\^O} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00D5}{\~O} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00D6}{\"O} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00D8}{\O} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00D9}{\`U} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00DA}{\'U} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00DB}{\^U} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00DC}{\"U} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00DD}{\'Y} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00DF}{\ss} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00E0}{\`a} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00E1}{\'a} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00E2}{\^a} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00E3}{\~a} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00E4}{\"a} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00E5}{\aa} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00E6}{\ae} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00E7}{\cedilla{c}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00E8}{\`e} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00E9}{\'e} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00EA}{\^e} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00EB}{\"e} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00EC}{\`{\dotless{i}}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00ED}{\'{\dotless{i}}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00EE}{\^{\dotless{i}}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00EF}{\"{\dotless{i}}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00F1}{\~n} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00F2}{\`o} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00F3}{\'o} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00F4}{\^o} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00F5}{\~o} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00F6}{\"o} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00F8}{\o} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00F9}{\`u} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00FA}{\'u} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00FB}{\^u} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00FC}{\"u} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00FD}{\'y} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{00FF}{\"y} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0100}{\=A} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0101}{\=a} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0102}{\u{A}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0103}{\u{a}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0106}{\'C} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0107}{\'c} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0108}{\^C} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0109}{\^c} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{010A}{\dotaccent{C}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{010B}{\dotaccent{c}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{010C}{\v{C}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{010D}{\v{c}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{010E}{\v{D}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0112}{\=E} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0113}{\=e} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0114}{\u{E}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0115}{\u{e}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0116}{\dotaccent{E}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0117}{\dotaccent{e}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{011A}{\v{E}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{011B}{\v{e}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{011C}{\^G} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{011D}{\^g} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{011E}{\u{G}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{011F}{\u{g}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0120}{\dotaccent{G}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0121}{\dotaccent{g}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0124}{\^H} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0125}{\^h} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0128}{\~I} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0129}{\~{\dotless{i}}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{012A}{\=I} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{012B}{\={\dotless{i}}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{012C}{\u{I}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{012D}{\u{\dotless{i}}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0130}{\dotaccent{I}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0131}{\dotless{i}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0132}{IJ} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0133}{ij} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0134}{\^J} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0135}{\^{\dotless{j}}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0139}{\'L} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{013A}{\'l} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0141}{\L} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0142}{\l} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0143}{\'N} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0144}{\'n} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0147}{\v{N}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0148}{\v{n}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{014C}{\=O} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{014D}{\=o} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{014E}{\u{O}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{014F}{\u{o}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0150}{\H{O}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0151}{\H{o}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0152}{\OE} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0153}{\oe} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0154}{\'R} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0155}{\'r} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0158}{\v{R}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0159}{\v{r}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{015A}{\'S} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{015B}{\'s} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{015C}{\^S} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{015D}{\^s} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{015E}{\cedilla{S}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{015F}{\cedilla{s}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0160}{\v{S}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0161}{\v{s}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0162}{\cedilla{t}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0163}{\cedilla{T}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0164}{\v{T}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0168}{\~U} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0169}{\~u} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{016A}{\=U} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{016B}{\=u} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{016C}{\u{U}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{016D}{\u{u}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{016E}{\ringaccent{U}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{016F}{\ringaccent{u}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0170}{\H{U}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0171}{\H{u}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0174}{\^W} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0175}{\^w} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0176}{\^Y} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0177}{\^y} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0178}{\"Y} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0179}{\'Z} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{017A}{\'z} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{017B}{\dotaccent{Z}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{017C}{\dotaccent{z}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{017D}{\v{Z}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{017E}{\v{z}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01C4}{D\v{Z}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01C5}{D\v{z}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01C6}{d\v{z}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01C7}{LJ} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01C8}{Lj} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01C9}{lj} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01CA}{NJ} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01CB}{Nj} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01CC}{nj} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01CD}{\v{A}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01CE}{\v{a}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01CF}{\v{I}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01D0}{\v{\dotless{i}}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01D1}{\v{O}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01D2}{\v{o}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01D3}{\v{U}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01D4}{\v{u}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01E2}{\={\AE}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01E3}{\={\ae}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01E6}{\v{G}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01E7}{\v{g}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01E8}{\v{K}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01E9}{\v{k}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01F0}{\v{\dotless{j}}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01F1}{DZ} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01F2}{Dz} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01F3}{dz} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01F4}{\'G} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01F5}{\'g} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01F8}{\`N} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01F9}{\`n} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01FC}{\'{\AE}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01FD}{\'{\ae}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01FE}{\'{\O}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{01FF}{\'{\o}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{021E}{\v{H}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{021F}{\v{h}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0226}{\dotaccent{A}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0227}{\dotaccent{a}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0228}{\cedilla{E}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0229}{\cedilla{e}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{022E}{\dotaccent{O}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{022F}{\dotaccent{o}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0232}{\=Y} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0233}{\=y} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0237}{\dotless{j}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E02}{\dotaccent{B}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E03}{\dotaccent{b}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E04}{\udotaccent{B}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E05}{\udotaccent{b}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E06}{\ubaraccent{B}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E07}{\ubaraccent{b}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E0A}{\dotaccent{D}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E0B}{\dotaccent{d}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E0C}{\udotaccent{D}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E0D}{\udotaccent{d}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E0E}{\ubaraccent{D}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E0F}{\ubaraccent{d}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E1E}{\dotaccent{F}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E1F}{\dotaccent{f}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E20}{\=G} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E21}{\=g} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E22}{\dotaccent{H}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E23}{\dotaccent{h}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E24}{\udotaccent{H}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E25}{\udotaccent{h}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E26}{\"H} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E27}{\"h} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E30}{\'K} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E31}{\'k} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E32}{\udotaccent{K}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E33}{\udotaccent{k}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E34}{\ubaraccent{K}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E35}{\ubaraccent{k}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E36}{\udotaccent{L}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E37}{\udotaccent{l}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E3A}{\ubaraccent{L}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E3B}{\ubaraccent{l}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E3E}{\'M} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E3F}{\'m} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E40}{\dotaccent{M}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E41}{\dotaccent{m}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E42}{\udotaccent{M}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E43}{\udotaccent{m}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E44}{\dotaccent{N}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E45}{\dotaccent{n}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E46}{\udotaccent{N}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E47}{\udotaccent{n}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E48}{\ubaraccent{N}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E49}{\ubaraccent{n}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E54}{\'P} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E55}{\'p} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E56}{\dotaccent{P}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E57}{\dotaccent{p}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E58}{\dotaccent{R}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E59}{\dotaccent{r}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E5A}{\udotaccent{R}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E5B}{\udotaccent{r}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E5E}{\ubaraccent{R}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E5F}{\ubaraccent{r}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E60}{\dotaccent{S}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E61}{\dotaccent{s}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E62}{\udotaccent{S}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E63}{\udotaccent{s}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E6A}{\dotaccent{T}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E6B}{\dotaccent{t}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E6C}{\udotaccent{T}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E6D}{\udotaccent{t}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E6E}{\ubaraccent{T}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E6F}{\ubaraccent{t}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E7C}{\~V} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E7D}{\~v} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E7E}{\udotaccent{V}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E7F}{\udotaccent{v}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E80}{\`W} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E81}{\`w} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E82}{\'W} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E83}{\'w} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E84}{\"W} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E85}{\"w} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E86}{\dotaccent{W}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E87}{\dotaccent{w}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E88}{\udotaccent{W}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E89}{\udotaccent{w}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E8A}{\dotaccent{X}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E8B}{\dotaccent{x}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E8C}{\"X} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E8D}{\"x} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E8E}{\dotaccent{Y}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E8F}{\dotaccent{y}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E90}{\^Z} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E91}{\^z} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E92}{\udotaccent{Z}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E93}{\udotaccent{z}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E94}{\ubaraccent{Z}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E95}{\ubaraccent{z}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E96}{\ubaraccent{h}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E97}{\"t} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E98}{\ringaccent{w}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1E99}{\ringaccent{y}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EA0}{\udotaccent{A}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EA1}{\udotaccent{a}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EB8}{\udotaccent{E}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EB9}{\udotaccent{e}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EBC}{\~E} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EBD}{\~e} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1ECA}{\udotaccent{I}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1ECB}{\udotaccent{i}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1ECC}{\udotaccent{O}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1ECD}{\udotaccent{o}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EE4}{\udotaccent{U}} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EE5}{\udotaccent{u}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EF2}{\`Y} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EF3}{\`y} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EF4}{\udotaccent{Y}} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EF8}{\~Y} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{1EF9}{\~y} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{2013}{--} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{2014}{---} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{2018}{\quoteleft} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{2019}{\quoteright} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{201A}{\quotesinglbase} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{201C}{\quotedblleft} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{201D}{\quotedblright} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{201E}{\quotedblbase} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{2022}{\bullet} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{2026}{\dots} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{2039}{\guilsinglleft} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{203A}{\guilsinglright} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{20AC}{\euro} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{2192}{\expansion} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{21D2}{\result} |
- |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{2212}{\minus} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{2217}{\point} |
- \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{2261}{\equiv} |
-}% end of \utfeightchardefs |
- |
- |
-% US-ASCII character definitions. |
-\def\asciichardefs{% nothing need be done |
- \relax |
-} |
- |
-% Make non-ASCII characters printable again for compatibility with |
-% existing Texinfo documents that may use them, even without declaring a |
-% document encoding. |
-% |
-\setnonasciicharscatcode \other |
- |
- |
-\message{formatting,} |
- |
-\newdimen\defaultparindent \defaultparindent = 15pt |
- |
-\chapheadingskip = 15pt plus 4pt minus 2pt |
-\secheadingskip = 12pt plus 3pt minus 2pt |
-\subsecheadingskip = 9pt plus 2pt minus 2pt |
- |
-% Prevent underfull vbox error messages. |
-\vbadness = 10000 |
- |
-% Don't be so finicky about underfull hboxes, either. |
-\hbadness = 2000 |
- |
-% Following George Bush, get rid of widows and orphans. |
-\widowpenalty=10000 |
-\clubpenalty=10000 |
- |
-% Use TeX 3.0's \emergencystretch to help line breaking, but if we're |
-% using an old version of TeX, don't do anything. We want the amount of |
-% stretch added to depend on the line length, hence the dependence on |
-% \hsize. We call this whenever the paper size is set. |
-% |
-\def\setemergencystretch{% |
- \ifx\emergencystretch\thisisundefined |
- % Allow us to assign to \emergencystretch anyway. |
- \def\emergencystretch{\dimen0}% |
- \else |
- \emergencystretch = .15\hsize |
- \fi |
-} |
- |
-% Parameters in order: 1) textheight; 2) textwidth; |
-% 3) voffset; 4) hoffset; 5) binding offset; 6) topskip; |
-% 7) physical page height; 8) physical page width. |
-% |
-% We also call \setleading{\textleading}, so the caller should define |
-% \textleading. The caller should also set \parskip. |
-% |
-\def\internalpagesizes#1#2#3#4#5#6#7#8{% |
- \voffset = #3\relax |
- \topskip = #6\relax |
- \splittopskip = \topskip |
- % |
- \vsize = #1\relax |
- \advance\vsize by \topskip |
- \outervsize = \vsize |
- \advance\outervsize by 2\topandbottommargin |
- \pageheight = \vsize |
- % |
- \hsize = #2\relax |
- \outerhsize = \hsize |
- \advance\outerhsize by 0.5in |
- \pagewidth = \hsize |
- % |
- \normaloffset = #4\relax |
- \bindingoffset = #5\relax |
- % |
- \ifpdf |
- \pdfpageheight #7\relax |
- \pdfpagewidth #8\relax |
- % if we don't reset these, they will remain at "1 true in" of |
- % whatever layout pdftex was dumped with. |
- \pdfhorigin = 1 true in |
- \pdfvorigin = 1 true in |
- \fi |
- % |
- \setleading{\textleading} |
- % |
- \parindent = \defaultparindent |
- \setemergencystretch |
-} |
- |
-% @letterpaper (the default). |
-\def\letterpaper{{\globaldefs = 1 |
- \parskip = 3pt plus 2pt minus 1pt |
- \textleading = 13.2pt |
- % |
- % If page is nothing but text, make it come out even. |
- \internalpagesizes{607.2pt}{6in}% that's 46 lines |
- {\voffset}{.25in}% |
- {\bindingoffset}{36pt}% |
- {11in}{8.5in}% |
-}} |
- |
-% Use @smallbook to reset parameters for 7x9.25 trim size. |
-\def\smallbook{{\globaldefs = 1 |
- \parskip = 2pt plus 1pt |
- \textleading = 12pt |
- % |
- \internalpagesizes{7.5in}{5in}% |
- {-.2in}{0in}% |
- {\bindingoffset}{16pt}% |
- {9.25in}{7in}% |
- % |
- \lispnarrowing = 0.3in |
- \tolerance = 700 |
- \hfuzz = 1pt |
- \contentsrightmargin = 0pt |
- \defbodyindent = .5cm |
-}} |
- |
-% Use @smallerbook to reset parameters for 6x9 trim size. |
-% (Just testing, parameters still in flux.) |
-\def\smallerbook{{\globaldefs = 1 |
- \parskip = 1.5pt plus 1pt |
- \textleading = 12pt |
- % |
- \internalpagesizes{7.4in}{4.8in}% |
- {-.2in}{-.4in}% |
- {0pt}{14pt}% |
- {9in}{6in}% |
- % |
- \lispnarrowing = 0.25in |
- \tolerance = 700 |
- \hfuzz = 1pt |
- \contentsrightmargin = 0pt |
- \defbodyindent = .4cm |
-}} |
- |
-% Use @afourpaper to print on European A4 paper. |
-\def\afourpaper{{\globaldefs = 1 |
- \parskip = 3pt plus 2pt minus 1pt |
- \textleading = 13.2pt |
- % |
- % Double-side printing via postscript on Laserjet 4050 |
- % prints double-sided nicely when \bindingoffset=10mm and \hoffset=-6mm. |
- % To change the settings for a different printer or situation, adjust |
- % \normaloffset until the front-side and back-side texts align. Then |
- % do the same for \bindingoffset. You can set these for testing in |
- % your texinfo source file like this: |
- % @tex |
- % \global\normaloffset = -6mm |
- % \global\bindingoffset = 10mm |
- % @end tex |
- \internalpagesizes{673.2pt}{160mm}% that's 51 lines |
- {\voffset}{\hoffset}% |
- {\bindingoffset}{44pt}% |
- {297mm}{210mm}% |
- % |
- \tolerance = 700 |
- \hfuzz = 1pt |
- \contentsrightmargin = 0pt |
- \defbodyindent = 5mm |
-}} |
- |
-% Use @afivepaper to print on European A5 paper. |
-% From romildo@urano.iceb.ufop.br, 2 July 2000. |
-% He also recommends making @example and @lisp be small. |
-\def\afivepaper{{\globaldefs = 1 |
- \parskip = 2pt plus 1pt minus 0.1pt |
- \textleading = 12.5pt |
- % |
- \internalpagesizes{160mm}{120mm}% |
- {\voffset}{\hoffset}% |
- {\bindingoffset}{8pt}% |
- {210mm}{148mm}% |
- % |
- \lispnarrowing = 0.2in |
- \tolerance = 800 |
- \hfuzz = 1.2pt |
- \contentsrightmargin = 0pt |
- \defbodyindent = 2mm |
- \tableindent = 12mm |
-}} |
- |
-% A specific text layout, 24x15cm overall, intended for A4 paper. |
-\def\afourlatex{{\globaldefs = 1 |
- \afourpaper |
- \internalpagesizes{237mm}{150mm}% |
- {\voffset}{4.6mm}% |
- {\bindingoffset}{7mm}% |
- {297mm}{210mm}% |
- % |
- % Must explicitly reset to 0 because we call \afourpaper. |
- \globaldefs = 0 |
-}} |
- |
-% Use @afourwide to print on A4 paper in landscape format. |
-\def\afourwide{{\globaldefs = 1 |
- \afourpaper |
- \internalpagesizes{241mm}{165mm}% |
- {\voffset}{-2.95mm}% |
- {\bindingoffset}{7mm}% |
- {297mm}{210mm}% |
- \globaldefs = 0 |
-}} |
- |
-% @pagesizes TEXTHEIGHT[,TEXTWIDTH] |
-% Perhaps we should allow setting the margins, \topskip, \parskip, |
-% and/or leading, also. Or perhaps we should compute them somehow. |
-% |
-\parseargdef\pagesizes{\pagesizesyyy #1,,\finish} |
-\def\pagesizesyyy#1,#2,#3\finish{{% |
- \setbox0 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #2}\ifdim\wd0 > 0pt \hsize=#2\relax \fi |
- \globaldefs = 1 |
- % |
- \parskip = 3pt plus 2pt minus 1pt |
- \setleading{\textleading}% |
- % |
- \dimen0 = #1\relax |
- \advance\dimen0 by \voffset |
- % |
- \dimen2 = \hsize |
- \advance\dimen2 by \normaloffset |
- % |
- \internalpagesizes{#1}{\hsize}% |
- {\voffset}{\normaloffset}% |
- {\bindingoffset}{44pt}% |
- {\dimen0}{\dimen2}% |
-}} |
- |
-% Set default to letter. |
-% |
-\letterpaper |
- |
- |
-\message{and turning on texinfo input format.} |
- |
-% Define macros to output various characters with catcode for normal text. |
-\catcode`\"=\other |
-\catcode`\~=\other |
-\catcode`\^=\other |
-\catcode`\_=\other |
-\catcode`\|=\other |
-\catcode`\<=\other |
-\catcode`\>=\other |
-\catcode`\+=\other |
-\catcode`\$=\other |
-\def\normaldoublequote{"} |
-\def\normaltilde{~} |
-\def\normalcaret{^} |
-\def\normalunderscore{_} |
-\def\normalverticalbar{|} |
-\def\normalless{<} |
-\def\normalgreater{>} |
-\def\normalplus{+} |
-\def\normaldollar{$}%$ font-lock fix |
- |
-% This macro is used to make a character print one way in \tt |
-% (where it can probably be output as-is), and another way in other fonts, |
-% where something hairier probably needs to be done. |
-% |
-% #1 is what to print if we are indeed using \tt; #2 is what to print |
-% otherwise. Since all the Computer Modern typewriter fonts have zero |
-% interword stretch (and shrink), and it is reasonable to expect all |
-% typewriter fonts to have this, we can check that font parameter. |
-% |
-\def\ifusingtt#1#2{\ifdim \fontdimen3\font=0pt #1\else #2\fi} |
- |
-% Same as above, but check for italic font. Actually this also catches |
-% non-italic slanted fonts since it is impossible to distinguish them from |
-% italic fonts. But since this is only used by $ and it uses \sl anyway |
-% this is not a problem. |
-\def\ifusingit#1#2{\ifdim \fontdimen1\font>0pt #1\else #2\fi} |
- |
-% Turn off all special characters except @ |
-% (and those which the user can use as if they were ordinary). |
-% Most of these we simply print from the \tt font, but for some, we can |
-% use math or other variants that look better in normal text. |
- |
-\catcode`\"=\active |
-\def\activedoublequote{{\tt\char34}} |
-\let"=\activedoublequote |
-\catcode`\~=\active |
-\def~{{\tt\char126}} |
-\chardef\hat=`\^ |
-\catcode`\^=\active |
-\def^{{\tt \hat}} |
- |
-\catcode`\_=\active |
-\def_{\ifusingtt\normalunderscore\_} |
-\let\realunder=_ |
-% Subroutine for the previous macro. |
-\def\_{\leavevmode \kern.07em \vbox{\hrule width.3em height.1ex}\kern .07em } |
- |
-\catcode`\|=\active |
-\def|{{\tt\char124}} |
-\chardef \less=`\< |
-\catcode`\<=\active |
-\def<{{\tt \less}} |
-\chardef \gtr=`\> |
-\catcode`\>=\active |
-\def>{{\tt \gtr}} |
-\catcode`\+=\active |
-\def+{{\tt \char 43}} |
-\catcode`\$=\active |
-\def${\ifusingit{{\sl\$}}\normaldollar}%$ font-lock fix |
- |
-% If a .fmt file is being used, characters that might appear in a file |
-% name cannot be active until we have parsed the command line. |
-% So turn them off again, and have \everyjob (or @setfilename) turn them on. |
-% \otherifyactive is called near the end of this file. |
-\def\otherifyactive{\catcode`+=\other \catcode`\_=\other} |
- |
-% Used sometimes to turn off (effectively) the active characters even after |
-% parsing them. |
-\def\turnoffactive{% |
- \normalturnoffactive |
- \otherbackslash |
-} |
- |
-\catcode`\@=0 |
- |
-% \backslashcurfont outputs one backslash character in current font, |
-% as in \char`\\. |
-\global\chardef\backslashcurfont=`\\ |
-\global\let\rawbackslashxx=\backslashcurfont % let existing .??s files work |
- |
-% \realbackslash is an actual character `\' with catcode other, and |
-% \doublebackslash is two of them (for the pdf outlines). |
-{\catcode`\\=\other @gdef@realbackslash{\} @gdef@doublebackslash{\\}} |
- |
-% In texinfo, backslash is an active character; it prints the backslash |
-% in fixed width font. |
-\catcode`\\=\active |
-@def@normalbackslash{{@tt@backslashcurfont}} |
-% On startup, @fixbackslash assigns: |
-% @let \ = @normalbackslash |
- |
-% \rawbackslash defines an active \ to do \backslashcurfont. |
-% \otherbackslash defines an active \ to be a literal `\' character with |
-% catcode other. |
-@gdef@rawbackslash{@let\=@backslashcurfont} |
-@gdef@otherbackslash{@let\=@realbackslash} |
- |
-% Same as @turnoffactive except outputs \ as {\tt\char`\\} instead of |
-% the literal character `\'. |
-% |
-@def@normalturnoffactive{% |
- @let\=@normalbackslash |
- @let"=@normaldoublequote |
- @let~=@normaltilde |
- @let^=@normalcaret |
- @let_=@normalunderscore |
- @let|=@normalverticalbar |
- @let<=@normalless |
- @let>=@normalgreater |
- @let+=@normalplus |
- @let$=@normaldollar %$ font-lock fix |
- @unsepspaces |
-} |
- |
-% Make _ and + \other characters, temporarily. |
-% This is canceled by @fixbackslash. |
-@otherifyactive |
- |
-% If a .fmt file is being used, we don't want the `\input texinfo' to show up. |
-% That is what \eatinput is for; after that, the `\' should revert to printing |
-% a backslash. |
-% |
-@gdef@eatinput input texinfo{@fixbackslash} |
-@global@let\ = @eatinput |
- |
-% On the other hand, perhaps the file did not have a `\input texinfo'. Then |
-% the first `\' in the file would cause an error. This macro tries to fix |
-% that, assuming it is called before the first `\' could plausibly occur. |
-% Also turn back on active characters that might appear in the input |
-% file name, in case not using a pre-dumped format. |
-% |
-@gdef@fixbackslash{% |
- @ifx\@eatinput @let\ = @normalbackslash @fi |
- @catcode`+=@active |
- @catcode`@_=@active |
-} |
- |
-% Say @foo, not \foo, in error messages. |
-@escapechar = `@@ |
- |
-% These look ok in all fonts, so just make them not special. |
-@catcode`@& = @other |
-@catcode`@# = @other |
-@catcode`@% = @other |
- |
- |
-@c Local variables: |
-@c eval: (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp) |
-@c page-delimiter: "^\\\\message" |
-@c time-stamp-start: "def\\\\texinfoversion{" |
-@c time-stamp-format: "%:y-%02m-%02d.%02H" |
-@c time-stamp-end: "}" |
-@c End: |
- |
-@c vim:sw=2: |
- |
-@ignore |
- arch-tag: e1b36e32-c96e-4135-a41a-0b2efa2ea115 |
-@end ignore |