Man page - aephea-base(7)
Packages contains this manual
Manual
aephea-base
NAMEDESCRIPTION
INTRODUCTION TO THE ITEMIZE ENVIRONMENT
USING THE ITEMIZE ENVIRONMENT
THE SPACING ENVIRONMENT
MACROS
ISSUES
NAME
aephea-base - a description of Aephea base definitions
The macros in this package have been ported to both html and troff.
DESCRIPTION
aephea-base - A description of Aephea base definitions. The macros in this package have been ported to both html and troff. This package is used by the Aephea simpledocument class and by the Portable Unix Documentation (pud) mini-languages for authoring manual pages ( pud-man ) and the pud language for faq authoring ( pud-faq ).
There is a small list of known issues in the ISSUES section, mostly concerning the troff device. These should generally be of no concern at all, but if you run into trouble look there first. A quick glance through the list before you run into trouble may be the wisest thing to do.
INTRODUCTION TO THE ITEMIZE ENVIRONMENT
The itemize environemnt is the Aephea workhorse for lists, enumerations, itemizations, and other tailed creatures. A simple and valid use is for example
\begin{itemize}
\item{\bf{foo}}
\car{
For I am foo.
}
\items{
{\bf{barra}}
{\bf{zuttelezut}}
}
\car{
For we are bar and zut.
}
\end{itemize}
This source result in the following output:
foo
For I am foo.
barra
zuttelezut
For we are bar and zut.
This is not impressive at all, but it gives an idea of how itemize works. The following example is a single itemize environment providing a rollercoasterride through most of the features of the itemize environment. As shown below, it is possible to change all the itemize settings and styles at will even within a single itemize instance. Of course this is not useful at all except for demonstrating the itemize capabilities, but it goes to show that the itemize macros are quite robust (by virtue of modularity).
NOTE
The entire listing below was put in Aephea’s
spacing
environment, described further below. The
environment was used to create extra margins on the two
sides.
1 Spacing modes compact and cascade are determined by the key flow . The current mode is compact , meaning that the itemize token and the ensuing text are on the same line. Below, compact mode is switched off (approximately) halfway. The interitem key determines the amount skipped between an item description and the next item.
2 Several item modes (custom, mark, enumeration).
3 Several enumeration modes (roman, arabic, alphabetic).
iv) The style of a list can be changed while in the middle of it.
v) Nuther item.
vi) The list can be ’interupted’ and resumed (by means of the \intermezzo#1 macro).
Perhaps you wonder what good is THAT for, and justly so. The \intermezzo#1 macro should only be used inbetween different items, i.e. it should not split content belonging to a single item.
[7] Items can be optionally and automatically right and/or left delimited. The current item is delimited with square brackets.
[8] Items can be left or right aligned.
[9] Items can be stacked, which is supported only when flow is set to cascade .
[10]
Beginning with this item,
flow
is set to
cascade
.
Implying
That
Stacking
is now possible.
[12]
(back to right-align) The itemcounter just keeps running by
the way.
[18] (back to compact) But the counter can be manipulated at will.
• A bullet
item.
• Now
interitem
is set to 0 (affecting the
current list), and a new list is started contiguous to the
present text (by having its margintop set to 0).
a. Hubris
b. Laziness
c. Impatience
Are the three virtues of
programming.
• This concludes a listing showing most of the itemize
capabilities.
USING THE ITEMIZE ENVIRONMENT
You steer the itemize environment by providing it with tag-value pairs like so:
\begin{itemize}{
{flow}{compact}
{interitem}{1}
{align}{right}
{type}{abc}
{rp}{.}
}
This is the list of tags that you may use.
margintop
Top of table, anomalous unit (ems), default 0.
interitem
Paragraph skip in
ems
inbetween items, default 0.
flow
Set to compact or cascade
textindent
Width of text indent in ems.
itemmargin
Width of item margin in ems (for right-aligned items).
mark
E.g.
\*{itembullet}
(if type=mark), affects
\item
.
align
One of left or right (item alignment), default left.
class_all
class name assigned to all block-level elements
lp
What’s printed immediately to the left of an item.
rp
What’s printed immediately to the right of an
item.
type
One of mark, roman, abc, arabic, affects
\item
.
itemcount
The count of items seen so far, e.g. 13 right now.
You need to know that the itemize environment internally maps these tags to dollar keys simply by prepending a dollar. Thus, if you want to reset one of the values associated with such a tag, you need to do e.g.
\set{$align}{right}
\set{$itemcount}{30}
A more robust to do this is to ensure that the modified key is retrieved from the right dictionary, i.e. the top-level itemize dictionary, as follows.
\set{{dict}{itemize}}{$align}{right}
\set{{dict}{itemize}}{$itemcount}{30}
THE SPACING ENVIRONMENT
Its syntax is identical to that of the itemize environment. It accepts tags left , right , top , and bottom . These should receive numeric values. The associated unit is em .
The troff device does not yet support the top and bottom tags.
MACROS
\
enref#2
\
iref#2
\
lref#2
\
aref#2
\
httpref#1
\
sibref#1
\
sibref#2
\
sibref#3
\enref#2
creates
a link for which the first
argument is the anchor and for which the second argument is
the content (which can be left empty).
\iref#2
takes such an anchor as the first argument and it takes
content that carries the link as the second argument.
\lref#2
takes a file name (possibly including a
relative or absolute path) as the first argument and content
as the second argument.
\aref#2
takes a URL (later
possibly a URI) as the first argument and content as the
second argument.
\sibref#2
takes a label as
argument which presumably is the name of some application.
It may append an extension depending on the current device,
and it assumes that
label + extension
is the name
of a file in the current directory. The second argument is
displayed in the text. For
\sibref#1
the displayed
text is the same as the label. For
\sibref#3
the
second argument is an additional anchor within the file
being linked to, and the third argument is the displayed
text.
\httpref#1
simply prints a URL which will be
active when html is output.
\
par#1
\
cpar#2
\
car#1
\
ccar#2
These are all paragraph macros that carry the paragraph
content as the last argument. The first argument of
\cpar#2
and
\ccar#2
is the caption. These
macros will ensure well-formedness for devices that support
it, such as html. Use
\car#1
where you don’t
need a paragraph skip, but just need to indicate that you
are in text mode again. You can simply always use
\par#1
and never use
\car#1
. If you care
about the details of spacing though, or if you have
particular trouble for example in creating an itemize
environment where you do not want top and bottom margins,
then it could be worthwile to turn to
\car#1
.
Examples for using
\car#1
are:
• After an environment
that always carries a bottom margin.
• After an environment that does
not
carry a
bottom margin, and where you specifically want the
environment to be contiguous to the enclosing text. The
listing you are currently reading is an example of this.
As promised. The \car macro may feel a little unusual. If you don’t mind standing the chance of a little spurious vertical white-space just use \par all the time. If you really need it, such as in an ’inline’ listing as above, the \car macro is ready to do the job.
\
bf#1
\
it#1
\
tt#1
\
v#1
\
ftinc#2
\
ftdec#2
The first four items set their argument in the
font
specified
.
\tt#1
and
\v#1
both
denote a typewriter font.
These macros should not be
nested if troff is to be among the output devices
.
Support for the last two items is not yet very robust. They
temporarily
increment
respectively
decrement
the font by the amount of the first
argument and apply the resulting setting to the second
argument.
\
verbatim#1
\
verbatix#1
Make the device output the contents verbatim in a
mono-spaced font, obeying spaces and newlines. This does not
prohibit expansion of macros, use
\protect#1
for
that. The macro
\verbatim#1
will create a
non-breaking environment.
ISSUES
Nesting
Do not nest
\bf#1
,
\it#1
,
\tt#1
,
or
\v#1
macros if troff is among the output
devices. It will yield unexpected results.
The rest of this list pertains to the itemize environment.
Margins
Do not use fractional values for
textindent
and
itemmargin
in the itemize environment, if troff is
among the output devices. The reason is that the Aephea
macros use the difference between these two values and pass
them on to the output devices. Troff rounds all values it
gets and thus the additive relationship between the values
may be lost.