Simplify treatment of the copyright notice, now I've also simplified
[sgt/halibut] / inputs / test.but
1 \title Halibut: A Test Document With A Stupidly Long Title Just To
2 See If Wrapping Titles Works OK. In Fact This Title Will Span Three
3 Lines, Not Just Two. How's That For Ludicrous?
4
5 \cfg{xhtml-leaf-smallest-contents}{2}
6 \cfg{xhtml-leaf-contains-contents}{true}
7 \cfg{man-headnumbers}{true}
8
9 This paragraph is not labelled \q{preamble}, but should still appear
10 as it.
11
12 \preamble This manual is a small joke effort, designed to use every
13 feature \#{ comment } that Halibut's input format supports. Creation
14 date \date{%Y.%m.%d} (default format is \date).
15
16 \c Here is a code paragraph in the preamble, just to stress that all
17 \c things are possible. Ooh!
18
19 \copyright Copyright 1999 Simon \#{second comment}Tatham. All rights
20 reserved.
21
22 Here's another paragraph, which goes after the copyright.
23
24 \define{metacoopt} [this is a nested,
25 multi-line macro, talking about \coopt
26 a bit]
27
28 \define{coopt} co\u00F6{-o}pt
29
30 \define{eur} \u20AC{EUR }
31
32 \versionid $Id: test.but,v 1.24 2004/03/30 19:40:56 simon Exp $
33
34 \C{ch\\ap} First chapter title; for similar wrapping reasons this
35 chapter title will be ludicrously long. I wonder how much more
36 chapter title I can write before feeling silly.
37
38 This is a para\#{another{} comment}graph of text. It
39 has line\#{yet another one} breaks in between words, multiple
40 spaces (ignored), and \e{emphasised text} as well as \c{code
41 fragments}.
42
43 \cw{This} is weak code. And \k{head} contains some other stuff.
44 \K{subhead} does too.
45
46 To test the man page back end:
47
48 .Directive
49
50 'Directive
51
52 \\Sping\\Spong\\Spoing
53
54 \H{head} First section title (very long again, no prizes for
55 guessing the reason why this time, and here's yet more text to pad
56 it out to three lines of output)
57
58 \cfg{winhelp-topic}{M359HPEHGW}
59
60 Here's a code paragraph:
61
62 \c No leading spaces
63 \c One leading space
64 \c Two blank lines follow this one.
65 \c
66 \c
67 \c Two blank lines precede this one.
68 \c Two leading spaces
69 \c We can use \ { and } with impunity here.
70 \c We can use discretionary bold and italic in code paragraphs!
71 \e bbbb iiiiii
72 \c Isn't that ludicrous?
73
74 This is a list:
75
76 \b Ooh.
77
78 \b Aah.
79
80 \lcont{
81
82 This bulletted list contains a list continuation. This is an
83 additional paragraph, or more than one, indented at the same level
84 as the list items, and able to contain nested sublists and other
85 features. For example, here's a code paragraph:
86
87 \c spingle:~$ whoami
88 \c spoggler
89
90 And here's a sublist. Numbered, just for variety.
91
92 \n One.
93
94 \lcont{
95
96 \n 1a.
97
98 \n 1b.
99
100 \n 1c.
101
102 \lcont{This is an even sillier one: a continuation of a list item in
103 a continuation of a list item in a continuation of a list item!}
104
105 }
106
107 \n Two.
108
109 \n Threeeee!
110
111 }
112
113 \b Eek.
114
115 This is a horizontal rule:
116
117 \rule
118
119 This is a numbered list:
120
121 \n Ooh.
122
123 \n{keyword} Aah.
124
125 \n Eek. \q{Aah} is point \k{keyword}.
126
127 This is a description list:
128
129 \dt FISH
130
131 \dd A piscine creature, often to be found swimming aimlessly around
132 in the sea eating things and not contributing to the global economy.
133
134 \lcont{
135
136 Here's another of those funky list continuation things, just to keep
137 Halibut on its toes.
138
139 }
140
141 \dt BADGER
142
143 \dd A non-piscine creature, often to be found snuffling around on
144 land, not contributing to the global economy, and not even swimming
145 to make up for it. I don't know. These mammals. Pa-thetic.
146
147 \dt "SAUSAGE SALESMAN"
148
149 \dd An exemplary contributor to the global economy. Unless he's CMOT
150 Dibbler.
151
152 A-paragraph-full-of-hyphens-to-test-the-idea-that-word-wrapping-can-happen-somewhere-in-all-this-hyphenatory-nonsense.
153
154 A\-paragraph\-full\-of\-nonbreaking\-hyphens\-to\-test\-the\-idea\-that\-word\-wrapping\-misses\-them.
155
156 A\_paragraph\_full\_of\_nonbreaking\_spaces\_to\_test\_the\_idea\_that\_word\_wrapping\_misses\_them\_too.
157
158 Use of macros: let's talk about \coopt. And about \coopt some more.
159 And a nested macro: \metacoopt.
160
161 A slightly more difficult macro: \eur\.2500.
162
163 Oh, while I'm here: some special characters. The \\, \{ and \}
164 characters, to be precise. And their code equivalents, \c{\\},
165 \i\c{\{}, \c{\}}.
166
167 \S{subhead} First subheading
168
169 So here's a \I{subheading}\I{subsection}subsection. Just
170 incidentally, \q{this} is in quotes. \ii{Those} quotes had better work
171 in all formats.
172
173 We'll try for some Unicode here: \i{Schr\u00F6{oe}dinger}.
174
175 An index tag containing non-alternatived Unicode: \i{\u00BFChe?}
176
177 An invisible index tag: \I{she seems to have an invisible tag}yeah.
178
179 \S2{sub-sub}{Florble} Smaller heading still
180
181 A tiny section. Awww. How cute. Actually, this one's a \e{florble},
182 and here's a reference to it: \k{sub-sub}.
183
184 \A{app} Needless appendix
185
186 \# \cfg{winhelp-topic}{Y5VQEXZQVJ} (uncomment this and it clashes)
187
188 Here's an \i{appendix}, for no terribly good reason at all. See
189 __\k{book}__ (please excuse those underscores, I'm testing
190 whitespace).
191
192 It also contains a \W{http://www.tartarus.org/}{hyperlink}.
193
194 \U Bibliography
195
196 \B{book} Some text describing a book.
197
198 \B{nocite} Some text describing a book. This text should appear in
199 the document even though there is no \cw{\\k} citing it.
200
201 \BR{book} [SillyCitation]
202 \BR{uncited} Badger.
203
204 \nocite{nocite}
205
206 \B{uncited} If this text appears, there's an actual error.
207
208 \# This is a comment.
209
210 \# Now for the index section.
211
212 \IM{she seems to have an invisible tag}{appendix} Invisible tags
213 and/or appendices