% Load plain if necessary, i.e., if running under initex.
\expandafter\ifx\csname fmtname\endcsname\relax\input plain\fi
%
-\def\texinfoversion{2009-03-20.11}
+\def\texinfoversion{2009-03-21.17}
%
% Copyright 1985, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995,
% 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006,
% 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
+ % it needs to be
% {\code {{\tt \backslashcurfont }acronym}
\shipout\vbox{%
% Do this early so pdf references go to the beginning of the page.
\def\?{?\spacefactor=\endofsentencespacefactor\space}
% @frenchspacing on|off says whether to put extra space after punctuation.
-%
+%
\def\onword{on}
\def\offword{off}
%
% that's what we do).
% double active backslashes.
-%
+%
{\catcode`\@=0 \catcode`\\=\active
@gdef@activebackslashdouble{%
@catcode`@\=@active
% 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%
% 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
% Definitions for a main text size of 11pt. This is the default in
% Texinfo.
-%
+%
\def\definetextfontsizexi{%
% Text fonts (11.2pt, magstep1).
\def\textnominalsize{11pt}
% 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}
\setfont\secsf\sfbshape{12}{1000}{OT1}
\let\secbf\secrm
\setfont\secsc\scbshape{10}{\magstep1}{OT1}
-\font\seci=cmmi12
+\font\seci=cmmi12
\font\secsy=cmsy10 scaled \magstep1
\def\sececsize{1200}
% 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}
%
%
% 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
% 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.
-%
+% regular 0x27.
+%
\def\codequoteright{%
\expandafter\ifx\csname SETtxicodequoteundirected\endcsname\relax
\expandafter\ifx\csname SETcodequoteundirected\endcsname\relax
% 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
% 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}
% @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}%
% @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}%
% 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
+ \ifx\curfontstyle\bfstylename
% bold:
\font\thiseurofont = \ifusingit{feybo10}{feybr10} at \eurosize
- \else
+ \else
% regular:
\font\thiseurofont = \ifusingit{feymo10}{feymr10} at \eurosize
\fi
% Glyphs from the EC fonts. We don't use \let for the aliases, because
% sometimes we redefine the original macro, and the alias should reflect
% the redefinition.
-%
+%
% Use LaTeX names for the Icelandic letters.
\def\DH{{\ecfont \char"D0}} % Eth
\def\dh{{\ecfont \char"F0}} % eth
% we have the precomposed glyphs for the most common cases. We put the
% tests to use those glyphs in the single \ogonek macro so we have fewer
% dummy definitions to worry about for index entries, etc.
-%
+%
% ogonek is also used with other letters in Lithuanian (IOU), but using
% the precomposed glyphs for those is not so easy since they aren't in
% the same EC font.
% 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
% 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
% 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}
% @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
%
% Non-English letters.
\definedummyword\AA
\definedummyword\AE
+ \definedummyword\DH
\definedummyword\L
- \definedummyword\OE
\definedummyword\O
+ \definedummyword\OE
+ \definedummyword\TH
\definedummyword\aa
\definedummyword\ae
+ \definedummyword\dh
+ \definedummyword\exclamdown
\definedummyword\l
- \definedummyword\oe
\definedummyword\o
- \definedummyword\ss
- \definedummyword\exclamdown
- \definedummyword\questiondown
+ \definedummyword\oe
\definedummyword\ordf
\definedummyword\ordm
+ \definedummyword\questiondown
+ \definedummyword\ss
+ \definedummyword\th
%
% Although these internal commands shouldn't show up, sometimes they do.
\definedummyword\bf
% Non-English letters.
\def\AA{AA}%
\def\AE{AE}%
+ \def\DH{DZZ}%
\def\L{L}%
\def\OE{OE}%
\def\O{O}%
+ \def\TH{ZZZ}%
\def\aa{aa}%
\def\ae{ae}%
+ \def\dh{dzz}%
+ \def\exclamdown{!}%
\def\l{l}%
\def\oe{oe}%
- \def\o{o}%
- \def\ss{ss}%
- \def\exclamdown{!}%
- \def\questiondown{?}%
\def\ordf{a}%
\def\ordm{o}%
+ \def\o{o}%
+ \def\questiondown{?}%
+ \def\ss{ss}%
+ \def\th{zzz}%
%
\def\LaTeX{LaTeX}%
\def\TeX{TeX}%
% 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
}
% 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.
\global\let\subsubsection = \numberedsubsubsec
}
-\outer\parseargdef\appendix{\apphead0{#1}} % normally apphead0 calls appendixzzz
+\outer\parseargdef\appendix{\apphead0{#1}} % normally calls appendixzzz
+%
\def\appendixzzz#1{%
\global\secno=0 \global\subsecno=0 \global\subsubsecno=0
\global\advance\appendixno by 1
% 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
% 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
% redefined for the two-volume lispref. We always output on
% \jobname.toc even if this is redefined.
-%
+%
\def\tocreadfilename{\jobname.toc}
% Normal (long) toc.
% 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
\closein 1
\endgroup % end raw TeX
\endgroup}
-}
+}% end of special _ catcode
%
% 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
+ \globaldefs = 1 % everything in the txi-LL files needs to persist
\input txi-#1.tex
\fi
\closein 1
% This macro is called from txi-??.tex files; the first argument is the
% \language name to set (without the "\lang@" prefix), the second and
% third args are \{left,right}hyphenmin.
-%
+%
% The language names to pass are determined when the format is built.
% See the etex.log file created at that time, e.g.,
% /usr/local/texlive/2008/texmf-var/web2c/pdftex/etex.log.
-%
+%
% With TeX Live 2008, etex now includes hyphenation patterns for all
% available languages. This means we can support hyphenation in
% Texinfo, at least to some extent. (This still doesn't solve the
% accented characters problem.)
-%
+%
\catcode`@=11
\def\txisetlanguage#1#2#3{%
% do not set the language if the name is undefined in the current TeX.
\setnonasciicharscatcode\active
\lattwochardefs
%
- \else \ifx \declaredencoding \latone
+ \else \ifx \declaredencoding \latone
\setnonasciicharscatcode\active
\latonechardefs
%
\setnonasciicharscatcode\active
\utfeightchardefs
%
- \else
+ \else
\message{Unknown document encoding #1, ignoring.}%
%
\fi % utfeight
% 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.
%
% Latin1 (ISO-8859-1) character definitions.
\def\latonechardefs{%
- \gdef^^a0{~}
+ \gdef^^a0{~}
\gdef^^a1{\exclamdown}
- \gdef^^a2{\missingcharmsg{CENT SIGN}}
+ \gdef^^a2{\missingcharmsg{CENT SIGN}}
\gdef^^a3{{\pounds}}
\gdef^^a4{\missingcharmsg{CURRENCY SIGN}}
\gdef^^a5{\missingcharmsg{YEN SIGN}}
- \gdef^^a6{\missingcharmsg{BROKEN BAR}}
+ \gdef^^a6{\missingcharmsg{BROKEN BAR}}
\gdef^^a7{\S}
- \gdef^^a8{\"{}}
- \gdef^^a9{\copyright}
+ \gdef^^a8{\"{}}
+ \gdef^^a9{\copyright}
\gdef^^aa{\ordf}
\gdef^^ab{\guillemetleft}
\gdef^^ac{$\lnot$}
- \gdef^^ad{\-}
- \gdef^^ae{\registeredsymbol}
+ \gdef^^ad{\-}
+ \gdef^^ae{\registeredsymbol}
\gdef^^af{\={}}
%
\gdef^^b0{\textdegree}
\gdef^^c2{\^A}
\gdef^^c3{\~A}
\gdef^^c4{\"A}
- \gdef^^c5{\ringaccent A}
+ \gdef^^c5{\ringaccent A}
\gdef^^c6{\AE}
\gdef^^c7{\cedilla C}
\gdef^^c8{\`E}
\gdef^^d6{\"O}
\gdef^^d7{$\times$}
\gdef^^d8{\v R}
- \gdef^^d9{\ringaccent U}
+ \gdef^^d9{\ringaccent U}
\gdef^^da{\'U}
\gdef^^db{\H U}
\gdef^^dc{\"U}
}
% 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
% Same as @turnoffactive except outputs \ as {\tt\char`\\} instead of
% the literal character `\'.
-%
+%
@def@normalturnoffactive{%
@let\=@normalbackslash
@let"=@normaldoublequote
@catcode`@`=@active
@markupsetuplqdefault
@markupsetuprqdefault
-
+
@c Local variables:
@c eval: (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp)
@c page-delimiter: "^\\\\message"