Mercurial > emacs
changeset 73205:eebe063ee090
better not use @LaTeX{}, I guess.
author | Karl Berry <karl@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 01 Oct 2006 22:52:07 +0000 |
parents | 4b4ecb095eca |
children | e81b342a6e8a |
files | man/text.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 19 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/text.texi Sun Oct 01 17:11:58 2006 +0000 +++ b/man/text.texi Sun Oct 01 22:52:07 2006 +0000 @@ -1370,11 +1370,11 @@ @findex doctex-mode @TeX{} is a powerful text formatter written by Donald Knuth; it is -also free software, like GNU Emacs. @LaTeX{} is a simplified input +also free software, like GNU Emacs. La@TeX{} is a simplified input format for @TeX{}, implemented by @TeX{} macros; it comes with @TeX{}. -Sli@TeX{} is a special form of @LaTeX{}.@footnote{Sli@TeX{} is +Sli@TeX{} is a special form of La@TeX{}.@footnote{Sli@TeX{} is obsoleted by the @samp{slides} document class and other alternative -packages in recent @LaTeX{} versions.} Doc@TeX{} (@file{.dtx}) is a +packages in recent La@TeX{} versions.} Doc@TeX{} (@file{.dtx}) is a special file format in which the La@TeX{} sources are written, combining sources with documentation. @@ -1383,13 +1383,13 @@ invoking @TeX{} on all or part of the file. @vindex tex-default-mode - @TeX{} mode has four variants: Plain @TeX{} mode, @LaTeX{} mode, + @TeX{} mode has four variants: Plain @TeX{} mode, La@TeX{} mode, Sli@TeX{} mode, and Doc@TeX{} mode (these distinct major modes differ only slightly). They are designed for editing the four different formats. The command @kbd{M-x tex-mode} looks at the contents of the -buffer to determine whether the contents appear to be either @LaTeX{} +buffer to determine whether the contents appear to be either La@TeX{} input, Sli@TeX{}, or Doc@TeX{} input; if so, it selects the -appropriate mode. If the file contents do not appear to be @LaTeX{}, +appropriate mode. If the file contents do not appear to be La@TeX{}, Sli@TeX{} or Doc@TeX{}, it selects Plain @TeX{} mode. If the contents are insufficient to determine this, the variable @code{tex-default-mode} controls which mode is used. @@ -1487,22 +1487,22 @@ @node LaTeX Editing @subsection La@TeX{} Editing Commands - @LaTeX{} mode, and its variant, Sli@TeX{} mode, provide a few extra + La@TeX{} mode, and its variant, Sli@TeX{} mode, provide a few extra features not applicable to plain @TeX{}. @table @kbd @item C-c C-o -Insert @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} for @LaTeX{} block and position +Insert @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} for La@TeX{} block and position point on a line between them (@code{tex-latex-block}). @item C-c C-e -Close the innermost @LaTeX{} block not yet closed +Close the innermost La@TeX{} block not yet closed (@code{tex-close-latex-block}). @end table @findex tex-latex-block -@kindex C-c C-o @r{(@LaTeX{} mode)} +@kindex C-c C-o @r{(La@TeX{} mode)} @vindex latex-block-names - In @LaTeX{} input, @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} commands are used to + In La@TeX{} input, @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} commands are used to group blocks of text. To insert a @samp{\begin} and a matching @samp{\end} (on a new line following the @samp{\begin}), use @kbd{C-c C-o} (@code{tex-latex-block}). A blank line is inserted between the @@ -1516,8 +1516,8 @@ @end example @findex tex-close-latex-block -@kindex C-c C-e @r{(@LaTeX{} mode)} - In @LaTeX{} input, @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} commands must +@kindex C-c C-e @r{(La@TeX{} mode)} + In La@TeX{} input, @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} commands must balance. You can use @kbd{C-c C-e} (@code{tex-close-latex-block}) to insert automatically a matching @samp{\end} to match the last unmatched @samp{\begin}. It indents the @samp{\end} to match the corresponding @@ -1645,9 +1645,9 @@ If @samp{%**start of header} does not appear within the first 100 lines of the buffer, @kbd{C-c C-r} assumes that there is no header. - In @LaTeX{} mode, the header begins with @samp{\documentclass} or + In La@TeX{} mode, the header begins with @samp{\documentclass} or @samp{\documentstyle} and ends with @samp{\begin@{document@}}. These -are commands that @LaTeX{} requires you to use in any case, so nothing +are commands that La@TeX{} requires you to use in any case, so nothing special needs to be done to identify the header. @findex tex-file @@ -1689,7 +1689,7 @@ @findex tex-bibtex-file @kindex C-c TAB @r{(@TeX{} mode)} @vindex tex-bibtex-command - For @LaTeX{} files, you can use Bib@TeX{} to process the auxiliary + For La@TeX{} files, you can use Bib@TeX{} to process the auxiliary file for the current buffer's file. Bib@TeX{} looks up bibliographic citations in a data base and prepares the cited references for the bibliography section. The command @kbd{C-c @key{TAB}} @@ -1751,9 +1751,9 @@ @end ignore @cindex Ref@TeX{} package -@cindex references, @LaTeX{} -@cindex @LaTeX{} references - For managing all kinds of references for @LaTeX{}, you can use +@cindex references, La@TeX{} +@cindex La@TeX{} references + For managing all kinds of references for La@TeX{}, you can use Ref@TeX{}. @inforef{Top,, reftex}. @node HTML Mode