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-rw-r--r-- | Doc/doc/doc.tex | 81 |
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diff --git a/Doc/doc/doc.tex b/Doc/doc/doc.tex index 9e727f7..40063b5 100644 --- a/Doc/doc/doc.tex +++ b/Doc/doc/doc.tex @@ -297,21 +297,88 @@ This \UNIX\ is also followed by a space. \UNIX, followed by a comma, needs no additional markup. \end{verbatim} - An \dfn{environment} is ... + An \dfn{environment} is a larger construct than a macro, and can + be used for things with more content that would conveniently fit + in a macro parameter. They are primarily used when formatting + parameters need to be changed before and after a large chunk of + content, but the content itself needs to be highly flexible. Code + samples are presented using an environment, and descriptions of + functions, methods, and classes are also marked using envionments. + + Since the content of an environment is free-form and can consist + of several paragraphs, they are actually marked using a pair of + macros: \macro{begin} and \macro{end}. These macros both take the + name of the environment as a parameter. An example is the + environment used to mark the abstract of a document: + +\begin{verbatim} +\begin{abstract} + This is the text of the abstract. It concisely explains what + information is found in the document. + + It can consist of multiple paragraphs. +\end{abstract} +\end{verbatim} + + An environment can also have required and optional parameters of + its own. These follow the parameter of the \macro{begin} macro. + This example shows an environment which takes a single required + parameter: + +\begin{verbatim} +\begin{datadesc}{datadesc}{controlnames} + A 33-element string array that contains the \ASCII{} mnemonics for + the thirty-two \ASCII{} control characters from 0 (NUL) to 0x1f + (US), in order, plus the mnemonic \samp{SP} for the space character. +\end{datadesc} +\end{verbatim} There are a number of less-used marks in \LaTeX{} are used to enter non-\ASCII{} characters, especially those used in European - names. Some which are found in the Python documentation are: + names. Given that these are often used adjacent to other + characters, the markup required to produce the proper character + may need to be followed by a space or an empty group, or the the + markup can be enclosed in a group. Some which are found in Python + documentation are: - XXX Table of Latin-1 characters that we've actually used in the - Python documentation, pointer to other, more complete - documentation elsewhere. +\begin{tableii}{c|l}{textrm}{Character}{Markup} + \lineii{\c c}{\code{\e c c}} + \lineii{\"o}{\code{\e"o}} + \lineii{\o}{\code{\e o}} +\end{tableii} \subsection{Hierarchical Structure} - XXX Talk about the traditional sectional hierarchy and how it's - marked in \LaTeX. + \LaTeX{} expects documents to be arranged in a conventional, + hierarchical way, with chapters, sections, sub-sections, + appendixes, and the like. These are marked using macros rather + than environments, probably because the end of a section can be + safely inferred when a section of equal or higher level starts. + + There are six ``levels'' of sectioning in the document classes + used for Python documentation, and the lowest two levels are not + used. The levels are: + + \begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{textrm}{Level}{Macro Name}{Notes} + \lineiii{1}{\macro{chapter}}{(1)} + \lineiii{2}{\macro{section}}{} + \lineiii{3}{\macro{subsection}}{} + \lineiii{4}{\macro{subsubsections}}{} + \lineiii{5}{\macro{paragraph}}{(2)} + \lineiii{6}{\macro{subparagraph}}{} + \end{tableiii} + + \noindent + Notes: + + \begin{description} + \item[(1)] + Only used for the \code{manual} documents, as described in + section \ref{classes}, ``Document Classes.'' + \item[(2)] + Not the same as a paragraph of text; nobody seems to use this. + \end{description} \section{Document Classes \label{classes}} |