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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 1996-10-08 21:52:23 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 1996-10-08 21:52:23 (GMT) |
commit | 58d7f69168891539a495c58dbab56f6f2542f5dd (patch) | |
tree | 95dd39302fda01e486cc133265b45135b64b8034 | |
parent | 42439ad738e53804676937d6621be69a24222836 (diff) | |
download | cpython-58d7f69168891539a495c58dbab56f6f2542f5dd.zip cpython-58d7f69168891539a495c58dbab56f6f2542f5dd.tar.gz cpython-58d7f69168891539a495c58dbab56f6f2542f5dd.tar.bz2 |
(libhtmllib.tex): Revised documentation for HTML support.
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/libhtmllib.tex | 285 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/libhtmllib.tex | 285 |
2 files changed, 128 insertions, 442 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libhtmllib.tex b/Doc/lib/libhtmllib.tex index aeb4ce9..cc9599d 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/libhtmllib.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/libhtmllib.tex @@ -5,19 +5,23 @@ \renewcommand{\indexsubitem}{(in module htmllib)} -This module defines a number of classes which can serve as a basis for -parsing text files formatted in HTML (HyperText Mark-up Language). -The classes are not directly concerned with I/O --- the have to be fed -their input in string form, and will make calls to methods of a -``formatter'' object in order to produce output. The classes are -designed to be used as base classes for other classes in order to add -functionality, and allow most of their methods to be extended or -overridden. In turn, the classes are derived from and extend the -class \code{SGMLParser} defined in module \code{sgmllib}. +This module defines a class which can serve as a base for parsing text +files formatted in the HyperText Mark-up Language (HTML). The class +is not directly concerned with I/O --- it must be provided with input +in string form via a method, and makes calls to methods of a +``formatter'' object in order to produce output. The +\code{HTMLParser} class is designed to be used as a base class for +other classes in order to add functionality, and allows most of its +methods to be extended or overridden. In turn, this class is derived +from and extends the \code{SGMLParser} class defined in module +\code{sgmllib}. Two implementations of formatter objects are +provided in the \code{formatter} module; refer to the documentation +for that module for information on the formatter interface. \index{SGML} \stmodindex{sgmllib} \ttindex{SGMLParser} \index{formatter} +\stmodindex{formatter} The following is a summary of the interface defined by \code{sgmllib.SGMLParser}: @@ -27,15 +31,17 @@ The following is a summary of the interface defined by \item The interface to feed data to an instance is through the \code{feed()} method, which takes a string argument. This can be called with as -little or as much text at a time as desired; -\code{p.feed(a); p.feed(b)} has the same effect as \code{p.feed(a+b)}. -When the data contains complete -HTML elements, these are processed immediately; incomplete elements -are saved in a buffer. To force processing of all unprocessed data, -call the \code{close()} method. - -Example: to parse the entire contents of a file, do\\ -\code{parser.feed(open(file).read()); parser.close()}. +little or as much text at a time as desired; \code{p.feed(a); +p.feed(b)} has the same effect as \code{p.feed(a+b)}. When the data +contains complete HTML tags, these are processed immediately; +incomplete elements are saved in a buffer. To force processing of all +unprocessed data, call the \code{close()} method. + +For example, to parse the entire contents of a file, use: +\begin{verbatim} +parser.feed(open('myfile.html').read()) +parser.close() +\end{verbatim} \item The interface to define semantics for HTML tags is very simple: derive @@ -52,223 +58,60 @@ should define the \code{do_\var{tag}} method. \end{itemize} -The module defines the following classes: - -\begin{funcdesc}{HTMLParser}{} -This is the most basic HTML parser class. It defines one additional -entity name over the names defined by the \code{SGMLParser} base -class, \code{\•}. It also defines handlers for the following -tags: \code{<LISTING>...</LISTING>}, \code{<XMP>...</XMP>}, and -\code{<PLAINTEXT>} (the latter is terminated only by end of file). -\end{funcdesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{CollectingParser}{} -This class, derived from \code{HTMLParser}, collects various useful -bits of information from the HTML text. To this end it defines -additional handlers for the following tags: \code{<A>...</A>}, -\code{<HEAD>...</HEAD>}, \code{<BODY>...</BODY>}, -\code{<TITLE>...</TITLE>}, \code{<NEXTID>}, and \code{<ISINDEX>}. -\end{funcdesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{FormattingParser}{formatter\, stylesheet} -This class, derived from \code{CollectingParser}, interprets a wide -selection of HTML tags so it can produce formatted output from the -parsed data. It is initialized with two objects, a \var{formatter} -which should define a number of methods to format text into -paragraphs, and a \var{stylesheet} which defines a number of static -parameters for the formatting process. Formatters and style sheets -are documented later in this section. -\index{formatter} -\index{style sheet} -\end{funcdesc} +The module defines a single class: -\begin{funcdesc}{AnchoringParser}{formatter\, stylesheet} -This class, derived from \code{FormattingParser}, extends the handling -of the \code{<A>...</A>} tag pair to call the formatter's -\code{bgn_anchor()} and \code{end_anchor()} methods. This allows the -formatter to display the anchor in a different font or color, etc. +\begin{funcdesc}{HTMLParser}{formatter} +This is the basic HTML parser class. It supports all entity names +required by the HTML 2.0 specification (RFC 1866). It also defines +handlers for all HTML 2.0 and many HTML 3.0 and 3.2 elements. \end{funcdesc} -Instances of \code{CollectingParser} (and thus also instances of -\code{FormattingParser} and \code{AnchoringParser}) have the following -instance variables: - -\begin{datadesc}{anchornames} -A list of the values of the \code{NAME} attributes of the \code{<A>} -tags encountered. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{anchors} -A list of the values of \code{HREF} attributes of the \code{<A>} tags -encountered. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{anchortypes} -A list of the values of the \code{TYPE} attributes of the \code{<A>} -tags encountered. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{inanchor} -Outside an \code{<A>...</A>} tag pair, this is zero. Inside such a -pair, it is a unique integer, which is positive if the anchor has a -\code{HREF} attribute, negative if it hasn't. Its absolute value is -one more than the index of the anchor in the \code{anchors}, -\code{anchornames} and \code{anchortypes} lists. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{isindex} -True if the \code{<ISINDEX>} tag has been encountered. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{nextid} -The attribute list of the last \code{<NEXTID>} tag encountered, or -an empty list if none. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{title} -The text inside the last \code{<TITLE>...</TITLE>} tag pair, or -\code{''} if no title has been encountered yet. -\end{datadesc} - -The \code{anchors}, \code{anchornames} and \code{anchortypes} lists -are ``parallel arrays'': items in these lists with the same index -pertain to the same anchor. Missing attributes default to the empty -string. Anchors with neither a \code{HREF} nor a \code{NAME} -attribute are not entered in these lists at all. - -The module also defines a number of style sheet classes. These should -never be instantiated --- their class variables are the only behavior -required. Note that style sheets are specifically designed for a -particular formatter implementation. The currently defined style -sheets are: -\index{style sheet} - -\begin{datadesc}{NullStylesheet} -A style sheet for use on a dumb output device such as an \ASCII{} -terminal. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{X11Stylesheet} -A style sheet for use with an X11 server. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{MacStylesheet} -A style sheet for use on Apple Macintosh computers. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{StdwinStylesheet} -A style sheet for use with the \code{stdwin} module; it is an alias -for either \code{X11Stylesheet} or \code{MacStylesheet}. -\bimodindex{stdwin} -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{GLStylesheet} -A style sheet for use with the SGI Graphics Library and its font -manager (the SGI-specific built-in modules \code{gl} and \code{fm}). -\bimodindex{gl} -\bimodindex{fm} -\end{datadesc} - -Style sheets have the following class variables: - -\begin{datadesc}{stdfontset} -A list of up to four font definititions, respectively for the roman, -italic, bold and constant-width variant of a font for normal text. If -the list contains less than four font definitions, the last item is -used as the default for missing items. The type of a font definition -depends on the formatter in use; its only use is as a parameter to the -formatter's \code{setfont()} method. -\end{datadesc} +In addition to tag methods, the \code{HTMLParser} class provides some +additional methods and instance variables for use within tag methods. -\begin{datadesc}{h1fontset} -\dataline{h2fontset} -\dataline{h3fontset} -The font set used for various headers (text inside \code{<H1>...</H1>} -tag pairs etc.). +\begin{datadesc}{formatter} +This is the formatter instance associated with the parser. \end{datadesc} -\begin{datadesc}{stdindent} -The indentation of normal text. This is measured in the ``native'' -units of the formatter in use; for some formatters these are -characters, for others (especially those that actually support -variable-spacing fonts) in pixels or printer points. +\begin{datadesc}{nofill} +Boolean flag which should be true when whitespace should not be +collapsed, or false when it should be. In general, this should only +be true when character data is to be treated as ``preformatted'' text, +as within a \code{<PRE>} element. The default value is false. This +affects the operation of \code{handle_data()} and \code{save_end()}. \end{datadesc} -\begin{datadesc}{ddindent} -The indentation used for the first level of \code{<DD>} tags. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{ulindent} -The indentation used for the first level of \code{<UL>} tags. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{h1indent} -The indentation used for level 1 headers. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{h2indent} -The indentation used for level 2 headers. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{literalindent} -The indentation used for literal text (text inside -\code{<PRE>...</PRE>} and similar tag pairs). -\end{datadesc} - -Although no documented implementation of a formatter exists, the -\code{FormattingParser} class assumes that formatters have a -certain interface. This interface requires the following methods: -\index{formatter} - -\begin{funcdesc}{setfont}{fontspec} -Set the font to be used subsequently. The \var{fontspec} argument is -an item in a style sheet's font set. -\end{funcdesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{flush}{} -Finish the current line, if not empty, and begin a new one. +\begin{funcdesc}{anchor_bgn}{href\, name\, type} +This method is called at the start of an anchor region. The arguments +correspond to the attributes of the \code{<A>} tag with the same +names. The default implementation maintains a list of hyperlinks +(defined by the \code{href} argument) within the document. The list +of hyperlinks is available as the data attribute \code{anchorlist}. \end{funcdesc} -\begin{funcdesc}{setleftindent}{n} -Set the left indentation of the following lines to \var{n} units. +\begin{funcdesc}{anchor_end}{} +This method is called at the end of an anchor region. The default +implementation adds a textual footnote marker using an index into the +list of hyperlinks created by \code{anchor_bgn()}. \end{funcdesc} -\begin{funcdesc}{needvspace}{n} -Require at least \var{n} blank lines before the next line. Implies -\code{flush()}. +\begin{funcdesc}{handle_image}{source\, alt\optional{\, ismap\optional{\, align\optional{\, width\optional{\, height}}}}} +This method is called to handle images. The default implementation +simply passes the \code{alt} value to the \code{handle_data()} +method. \end{funcdesc} -\begin{funcdesc}{addword}{word\, space} -Add a \var{word} to the current paragraph, followed by \var{space} -spaces. +\begin{funcdesc}{save_bgn}{} +Begins saving character data in a buffer instead of sending it to the +formatter object. Retrieve the stored data via \code{save_end()} +Use of the \code{save_bgn()} / \code{save_end()} pair may not be +nested. \end{funcdesc} -\begin{datadesc}{nospace} -If this instance variable is true, empty words should be ignored by -\code{addword}. It should be set to false after a non-empty word has -been added. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{setjust}{justification} -Set the justification of the current paragraph. The -\var{justification} can be \code{'c'} (center), \code{'l'} (left -justified), \code{'r'} (right justified) or \code{'lr'} (left and -right justified). -\end{funcdesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{bgn_anchor}{id} -Begin an anchor. The \var{id} parameter is the value of the parser's -\code{inanchor} attribute. +\begin{funcdesc}{save_end}{} +Ends buffering character data and returns all data saved since the +preceeding call to \code{save_bgn()}. If \code{nofill} flag is false, +whitespace is collapsed to single spaces. A call to this method +without a preceeding call to \code{save_bgn()} will raise a +\code{TypeError} exception. \end{funcdesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{end_anchor}{id} -End an anchor. The \var{id} parameter is the value of the parser's -\code{inanchor} attribute. -\end{funcdesc} - -A sample formatter implementation can be found in the module -\code{fmt}, which in turn uses the module \code{Para}. These modules are -not intended as standard library modules; they are available as an -example of how to write a formatter. -\ttindex{fmt} -\ttindex{Para} diff --git a/Doc/libhtmllib.tex b/Doc/libhtmllib.tex index aeb4ce9..cc9599d 100644 --- a/Doc/libhtmllib.tex +++ b/Doc/libhtmllib.tex @@ -5,19 +5,23 @@ \renewcommand{\indexsubitem}{(in module htmllib)} -This module defines a number of classes which can serve as a basis for -parsing text files formatted in HTML (HyperText Mark-up Language). -The classes are not directly concerned with I/O --- the have to be fed -their input in string form, and will make calls to methods of a -``formatter'' object in order to produce output. The classes are -designed to be used as base classes for other classes in order to add -functionality, and allow most of their methods to be extended or -overridden. In turn, the classes are derived from and extend the -class \code{SGMLParser} defined in module \code{sgmllib}. +This module defines a class which can serve as a base for parsing text +files formatted in the HyperText Mark-up Language (HTML). The class +is not directly concerned with I/O --- it must be provided with input +in string form via a method, and makes calls to methods of a +``formatter'' object in order to produce output. The +\code{HTMLParser} class is designed to be used as a base class for +other classes in order to add functionality, and allows most of its +methods to be extended or overridden. In turn, this class is derived +from and extends the \code{SGMLParser} class defined in module +\code{sgmllib}. Two implementations of formatter objects are +provided in the \code{formatter} module; refer to the documentation +for that module for information on the formatter interface. \index{SGML} \stmodindex{sgmllib} \ttindex{SGMLParser} \index{formatter} +\stmodindex{formatter} The following is a summary of the interface defined by \code{sgmllib.SGMLParser}: @@ -27,15 +31,17 @@ The following is a summary of the interface defined by \item The interface to feed data to an instance is through the \code{feed()} method, which takes a string argument. This can be called with as -little or as much text at a time as desired; -\code{p.feed(a); p.feed(b)} has the same effect as \code{p.feed(a+b)}. -When the data contains complete -HTML elements, these are processed immediately; incomplete elements -are saved in a buffer. To force processing of all unprocessed data, -call the \code{close()} method. - -Example: to parse the entire contents of a file, do\\ -\code{parser.feed(open(file).read()); parser.close()}. +little or as much text at a time as desired; \code{p.feed(a); +p.feed(b)} has the same effect as \code{p.feed(a+b)}. When the data +contains complete HTML tags, these are processed immediately; +incomplete elements are saved in a buffer. To force processing of all +unprocessed data, call the \code{close()} method. + +For example, to parse the entire contents of a file, use: +\begin{verbatim} +parser.feed(open('myfile.html').read()) +parser.close() +\end{verbatim} \item The interface to define semantics for HTML tags is very simple: derive @@ -52,223 +58,60 @@ should define the \code{do_\var{tag}} method. \end{itemize} -The module defines the following classes: - -\begin{funcdesc}{HTMLParser}{} -This is the most basic HTML parser class. It defines one additional -entity name over the names defined by the \code{SGMLParser} base -class, \code{\•}. It also defines handlers for the following -tags: \code{<LISTING>...</LISTING>}, \code{<XMP>...</XMP>}, and -\code{<PLAINTEXT>} (the latter is terminated only by end of file). -\end{funcdesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{CollectingParser}{} -This class, derived from \code{HTMLParser}, collects various useful -bits of information from the HTML text. To this end it defines -additional handlers for the following tags: \code{<A>...</A>}, -\code{<HEAD>...</HEAD>}, \code{<BODY>...</BODY>}, -\code{<TITLE>...</TITLE>}, \code{<NEXTID>}, and \code{<ISINDEX>}. -\end{funcdesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{FormattingParser}{formatter\, stylesheet} -This class, derived from \code{CollectingParser}, interprets a wide -selection of HTML tags so it can produce formatted output from the -parsed data. It is initialized with two objects, a \var{formatter} -which should define a number of methods to format text into -paragraphs, and a \var{stylesheet} which defines a number of static -parameters for the formatting process. Formatters and style sheets -are documented later in this section. -\index{formatter} -\index{style sheet} -\end{funcdesc} +The module defines a single class: -\begin{funcdesc}{AnchoringParser}{formatter\, stylesheet} -This class, derived from \code{FormattingParser}, extends the handling -of the \code{<A>...</A>} tag pair to call the formatter's -\code{bgn_anchor()} and \code{end_anchor()} methods. This allows the -formatter to display the anchor in a different font or color, etc. +\begin{funcdesc}{HTMLParser}{formatter} +This is the basic HTML parser class. It supports all entity names +required by the HTML 2.0 specification (RFC 1866). It also defines +handlers for all HTML 2.0 and many HTML 3.0 and 3.2 elements. \end{funcdesc} -Instances of \code{CollectingParser} (and thus also instances of -\code{FormattingParser} and \code{AnchoringParser}) have the following -instance variables: - -\begin{datadesc}{anchornames} -A list of the values of the \code{NAME} attributes of the \code{<A>} -tags encountered. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{anchors} -A list of the values of \code{HREF} attributes of the \code{<A>} tags -encountered. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{anchortypes} -A list of the values of the \code{TYPE} attributes of the \code{<A>} -tags encountered. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{inanchor} -Outside an \code{<A>...</A>} tag pair, this is zero. Inside such a -pair, it is a unique integer, which is positive if the anchor has a -\code{HREF} attribute, negative if it hasn't. Its absolute value is -one more than the index of the anchor in the \code{anchors}, -\code{anchornames} and \code{anchortypes} lists. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{isindex} -True if the \code{<ISINDEX>} tag has been encountered. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{nextid} -The attribute list of the last \code{<NEXTID>} tag encountered, or -an empty list if none. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{title} -The text inside the last \code{<TITLE>...</TITLE>} tag pair, or -\code{''} if no title has been encountered yet. -\end{datadesc} - -The \code{anchors}, \code{anchornames} and \code{anchortypes} lists -are ``parallel arrays'': items in these lists with the same index -pertain to the same anchor. Missing attributes default to the empty -string. Anchors with neither a \code{HREF} nor a \code{NAME} -attribute are not entered in these lists at all. - -The module also defines a number of style sheet classes. These should -never be instantiated --- their class variables are the only behavior -required. Note that style sheets are specifically designed for a -particular formatter implementation. The currently defined style -sheets are: -\index{style sheet} - -\begin{datadesc}{NullStylesheet} -A style sheet for use on a dumb output device such as an \ASCII{} -terminal. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{X11Stylesheet} -A style sheet for use with an X11 server. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{MacStylesheet} -A style sheet for use on Apple Macintosh computers. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{StdwinStylesheet} -A style sheet for use with the \code{stdwin} module; it is an alias -for either \code{X11Stylesheet} or \code{MacStylesheet}. -\bimodindex{stdwin} -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{GLStylesheet} -A style sheet for use with the SGI Graphics Library and its font -manager (the SGI-specific built-in modules \code{gl} and \code{fm}). -\bimodindex{gl} -\bimodindex{fm} -\end{datadesc} - -Style sheets have the following class variables: - -\begin{datadesc}{stdfontset} -A list of up to four font definititions, respectively for the roman, -italic, bold and constant-width variant of a font for normal text. If -the list contains less than four font definitions, the last item is -used as the default for missing items. The type of a font definition -depends on the formatter in use; its only use is as a parameter to the -formatter's \code{setfont()} method. -\end{datadesc} +In addition to tag methods, the \code{HTMLParser} class provides some +additional methods and instance variables for use within tag methods. -\begin{datadesc}{h1fontset} -\dataline{h2fontset} -\dataline{h3fontset} -The font set used for various headers (text inside \code{<H1>...</H1>} -tag pairs etc.). +\begin{datadesc}{formatter} +This is the formatter instance associated with the parser. \end{datadesc} -\begin{datadesc}{stdindent} -The indentation of normal text. This is measured in the ``native'' -units of the formatter in use; for some formatters these are -characters, for others (especially those that actually support -variable-spacing fonts) in pixels or printer points. +\begin{datadesc}{nofill} +Boolean flag which should be true when whitespace should not be +collapsed, or false when it should be. In general, this should only +be true when character data is to be treated as ``preformatted'' text, +as within a \code{<PRE>} element. The default value is false. This +affects the operation of \code{handle_data()} and \code{save_end()}. \end{datadesc} -\begin{datadesc}{ddindent} -The indentation used for the first level of \code{<DD>} tags. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{ulindent} -The indentation used for the first level of \code{<UL>} tags. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{h1indent} -The indentation used for level 1 headers. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{h2indent} -The indentation used for level 2 headers. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{datadesc}{literalindent} -The indentation used for literal text (text inside -\code{<PRE>...</PRE>} and similar tag pairs). -\end{datadesc} - -Although no documented implementation of a formatter exists, the -\code{FormattingParser} class assumes that formatters have a -certain interface. This interface requires the following methods: -\index{formatter} - -\begin{funcdesc}{setfont}{fontspec} -Set the font to be used subsequently. The \var{fontspec} argument is -an item in a style sheet's font set. -\end{funcdesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{flush}{} -Finish the current line, if not empty, and begin a new one. +\begin{funcdesc}{anchor_bgn}{href\, name\, type} +This method is called at the start of an anchor region. The arguments +correspond to the attributes of the \code{<A>} tag with the same +names. The default implementation maintains a list of hyperlinks +(defined by the \code{href} argument) within the document. The list +of hyperlinks is available as the data attribute \code{anchorlist}. \end{funcdesc} -\begin{funcdesc}{setleftindent}{n} -Set the left indentation of the following lines to \var{n} units. +\begin{funcdesc}{anchor_end}{} +This method is called at the end of an anchor region. The default +implementation adds a textual footnote marker using an index into the +list of hyperlinks created by \code{anchor_bgn()}. \end{funcdesc} -\begin{funcdesc}{needvspace}{n} -Require at least \var{n} blank lines before the next line. Implies -\code{flush()}. +\begin{funcdesc}{handle_image}{source\, alt\optional{\, ismap\optional{\, align\optional{\, width\optional{\, height}}}}} +This method is called to handle images. The default implementation +simply passes the \code{alt} value to the \code{handle_data()} +method. \end{funcdesc} -\begin{funcdesc}{addword}{word\, space} -Add a \var{word} to the current paragraph, followed by \var{space} -spaces. +\begin{funcdesc}{save_bgn}{} +Begins saving character data in a buffer instead of sending it to the +formatter object. Retrieve the stored data via \code{save_end()} +Use of the \code{save_bgn()} / \code{save_end()} pair may not be +nested. \end{funcdesc} -\begin{datadesc}{nospace} -If this instance variable is true, empty words should be ignored by -\code{addword}. It should be set to false after a non-empty word has -been added. -\end{datadesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{setjust}{justification} -Set the justification of the current paragraph. The -\var{justification} can be \code{'c'} (center), \code{'l'} (left -justified), \code{'r'} (right justified) or \code{'lr'} (left and -right justified). -\end{funcdesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{bgn_anchor}{id} -Begin an anchor. The \var{id} parameter is the value of the parser's -\code{inanchor} attribute. +\begin{funcdesc}{save_end}{} +Ends buffering character data and returns all data saved since the +preceeding call to \code{save_bgn()}. If \code{nofill} flag is false, +whitespace is collapsed to single spaces. A call to this method +without a preceeding call to \code{save_bgn()} will raise a +\code{TypeError} exception. \end{funcdesc} - -\begin{funcdesc}{end_anchor}{id} -End an anchor. The \var{id} parameter is the value of the parser's -\code{inanchor} attribute. -\end{funcdesc} - -A sample formatter implementation can be found in the module -\code{fmt}, which in turn uses the module \code{Para}. These modules are -not intended as standard library modules; they are available as an -example of how to write a formatter. -\ttindex{fmt} -\ttindex{Para} |