Lines, Not Just Two. How's That For Ludicrous?
\cfg{xhtml-leaf-smallest-contents}{2}
-
\cfg{xhtml-leaf-contains-contents}{true}
+\cfg{man-headnumbers}{true}
+
+This paragraph is not labelled \q{preamble}, but should still appear
+as it.
\preamble This manual is a small joke effort, designed to use every
feature \#{ comment } that Halibut's input format supports. Creation
date \date{%Y.%m.%d} (default format is \date).
+\c Here is a code paragraph in the preamble, just to stress that all
+\c things are possible. Ooh!
+
\copyright Copyright 1999 Simon \#{second comment}Tatham. All rights
reserved.
\define{coopt} co\u00F6{-o}pt
-\versionid $Id: test.but,v 1.20 2004/03/23 20:10:23 simon Exp $
+\define{eur} \u20AC{EUR }
+
+\versionid $Id: test.but,v 1.23 2004/03/25 19:27:12 simon Exp $
\C{ch\\ap} First chapter title; for similar wrapping reasons this
chapter title will be ludicrously long. I wonder how much more
\c Two blank lines precede this one.
\c Two leading spaces
\c We can use \ { and } with impunity here.
+\c We can use discretionary bold and italic in code paragraphs!
+\e bbbb iiiiii
+\c Isn't that ludicrous?
This is a list:
Use of macros: let's talk about \coopt. And about \coopt some more.
And a nested macro: \metacoopt.
+A slightly more difficult macro: \eur\.2500.
+
Oh, while I'm here: some special characters. The \\, \{ and \}
characters, to be precise. And their code equivalents, \c{\\},
\i\c{\{}, \c{\}}.