From ea8075f55ea0bfc2ed04c9efa0e03c2468962eec Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Simon Tatham Date: Fri, 16 Jul 2004 11:54:04 +0000 Subject: Right; I'm finally sick of typing \q{\cw{foo}}, so I've invented a shorthand command \cq{foo}. [originally from svn r4327] --- inputs/test.but | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) (limited to 'inputs/test.but') diff --git a/inputs/test.but b/inputs/test.but index c5dcddb..58d10ef 100644 --- a/inputs/test.but +++ b/inputs/test.but @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ a bit] \define{eur} \u20AC{EUR } -\versionid $Id: test.but,v 1.33 2004/06/20 13:44:30 simon Exp $ +\versionid $Id: test.but,v 1.34 2004/07/16 11:54:04 simon Exp $ \C{ch\\ap} First chapter title; for similar wrapping reasons this chapter title will be ludicrously long. I wonder how much more @@ -43,8 +43,8 @@ has line\#{yet another one} breaks in between words, multiple spaces (ignored), and \e{emphasised text} as well as \c{code fragments}. -\cw{This} is weak code. And \k{head} contains some other stuff. -\K{subhead} does too. +\cw{This} is weak code; \cq{this} is quoted code. And \k{head} +contains some other stuff. \K{subhead} does too. To test the man page back end: -- cgit v1.1