\title Buttress: A Test Document \preamble This manual is a small joke effort, designed to use every feature that Buttress's input format supports. \copyright Copyright 1999 Simon Tatham. All rights reserved. \C{chap} First chapter title This is a paragraph of text. It has line breaks in between words, multiple spaces (ignored), and \e{emphasised text} as well as \c{code fragments}. \cw{This} is weak code. And \k{sect} contains some other stuff. \K{head} does too. \S{sect} First section title Here's a code paragraph: \c No leading spaces \c One leading space \c Blank line follows this one. \c \c \c \c \c Blank line precedes this one. \c Two leading spaces \c We can use \ { and } with impunity here. This is a list: \b Ooh. \b Aah. \b Eek. This is a numbered list: \n Ooh. \n{keyword} Aah. \n Eek. `Aah' is point \k{keyword}. Oh, while I'm here: some special characters. The \\, \{ and \} characters, to be precise. And their code equivalents, \c{\\}, \c{\{}, \c{\}}. \H{head} First subheading So here's a subsection. Just incidentally, `this' is in quotes. Those quotes had better work in all formats. We'll try for some Unicode here: \i{Schr\u00F6{oe}dinger}. An index tag containing non-alternatived Unicode: \i{\u00BFChe?} An invisible index tag: \I{she seems to have an invisible tag}yeah. \A{app} Needless appendix Here's an \i{appendix}, for no terribly good reason at all. See \k{book}. \U{bib} Bibliography \B{book} Some text describing a book. \B{nocite} Some text describing a book. This text should appear in the document even though there is no \cw{\\k} citing it. \nocite{nocite} \B{uncited} If this text appears, there's an actual error. \# This is a comment. \# Now for the index section. \IM{she seems to have an invisible tag}{appendix} Invisible tags and/or appendices