view ja/preface.tex @ 789:4cf1bbfe4d2c

restore the script to generate examples for tex.
author Yoshiki Yazawa <yaz@honeyplanet.jp>
date Tue, 09 Jun 2009 15:09:39 +0900
parents 4ffdaa0773a3
children 8a3041e6f3cb
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%\chapter*{Preface}
\chapter*{$B$^$($,$-(B}
\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{Preface}
\label{chap:preface}

%Distributed revision control is a relatively new territory, and has
%thus far grown due to people's willingness to strike out into
%ill-charted territory.

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$B0h$+$iH4$1=P$=$&$H$$$&?M!9$N0U;V$G5^B.$KH/E8$7$F$$$k!%(B

%I am writing a book about distributed revision control because I
%believe that it is an important subject that deserves a field guide.
%I chose to write about Mercurial because it is the easiest tool to
%learn the terrain with, and yet it scales to the demands of real,
%challenging environments where many other revision control tools fail.

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$B9g$o$;$F%9%1!<%k$9$k%D!<%k$@$+$i$@!%(B


%\section{This book is a work in progress}
\section{$B$3$NK\$O<9I.Cf$G$"$k(B}

%I am releasing this book while I am still writing it, in the hope that
%it will prove useful to others.  I also hope that readers will
%contribute as they see fit.

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%\section{About the examples in this book}
\section{$B$3$NK\$NNc$K$D$$$F(B}

%This book takes an unusual approach to code samples.  Every example is
%``live''---each one is actually the result of a shell script that
%executes the Mercurial commands you see.  Every time an image of the
%book is built from its sources, all the example scripts are
%automatically run, and their current results compared against their
%expected results.

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$B$-$F$$$k(B''---$BA4$F$NNc$O(BMercurial$B%3%^%s%I$r5/F0$9$k%7%'%k%9%/%j%W%H$N7k2L(B
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$B5/F0$9$k!%8=:_$N7k2L$O4|BT$5$l$k7k2L$HHf3S$5$l$k!%(B

%The advantage of this approach is that the examples are always accurate;
%they describe \emph{exactly} the behaviour of the version of Mercurial
%that's mentioned at the front of the book.  If I update the version of
%Mercurial that I'm documenting, and the output of some command changes,
%the build fails.

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$BGT$9$k!%(B

%There is a small disadvantage to this approach, which is that the dates
%and times you'll see in examples tend to be ``squashed'' together in a
%way that they wouldn't be if the same commands were being typed by a
%human.  Where a human can issue no more than one command every few
%seconds, with any resulting timestamps correspondingly spread out, my
%automated example scripts run many commands in one second.

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$B$7$F$7$^$&!%(B

%As an instance of this, several consecutive commits in an example can
%show up as having occurred during the same second.  You can see this
%occur in the \hgext{bisect} example in section~\ref{sec:undo:bisect},
%for instance.

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$B$k!%(B

%So when you're reading examples, don't place too much weight on the
%dates or times you see in the output of commands.  But \emph{do} be
%confident that the behaviour you're seeing is consistent and
%reproducible.

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$B$J$$$b$N$G$"$k!%(B


%\section{Colophon---this book is Free}
\section{$BGXI=;f(B---$B$3$NK\$OL5NA$G$"$k(B}

%This book is licensed under the Open Publication License, and is
%produced entirely using Free Software tools.  It is typeset with
%\LaTeX{}; illustrations are drawn and rendered with
%\href{http://www.inkscape.org/}{Inkscape}.

$B$3$NK\$O(BOpen Publication License$B$N2<$G%i%$%;%s%9$5$l!$A4BN$KEO$C$F%U%j!<(B
$B%=%U%H%&%'%"%D!<%k$r;H$C$F:n$i$l$F$$$k!%AHHG$O(B\LaTeX{}$B$r;H$C$F9T$o$l!$?^(B
$BHG$O(B\href{http://www.inkscape.org/}{Inkscape}$B$r;H$C$F9T$o$l$F$$$k!%(B

%The complete source code for this book is published as a Mercurial
%repository, at \url{http://hg.serpentine.com/mercurial/book}.

$B$3$NK\$N40A4$J%=!<%9$O!$(B\url{http://hg.serpentine.com/mercurial/book}$B$K(B
$B$F(BMercurial$B%j%]%8%H%j$H$7$F8x3+$5$l$F$$$k!%(B

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