Eplain: Expanded Plain TeX

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Eplain

This manual documents the Eplain macros, version 3.6, September 2013. Eplain provides functionality for plain TeX that is intended to be useful regardless of how your document is actually formatted.

Most of this manual is in the public domain, like most of the Eplain code. It was originally written by Karl Berry, starting in 1989. Steven Smith wrote the documentation for the commutative diagram macros; this chapter is under the GNU General Public License. Adam Lewenberg has made additions and corrections. Oleg Katsitadze wrote the section on LaTeX packages and the chapter on hyperlinks, and updates throughout.

The Eplain home page is http://tug.org/eplain.


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1 Introduction

The Eplain macro package expands on and extends the definitions in plain TeX. Its home on the web is http://tug.org/eplain.

This manual describes the definitions that you, as either an author or a macro writer, might like to use. It doesn’t discuss the implementation; see comments in the source code (xeplain.tex) for that.

Eplain is not intended to provide typesetting capabilities, as does LaTeX (originally written by Leslie Lamport) and Texinfo (Originally written by Richard Stallman). Instead, it provides definitions that are intended to be useful regardless of the high-level commands that you use when you actually prepare your manuscript.

For example, Eplain does not have a command \section to format section headings in an “appropriate” way, such as LaTeX’s \section. The philosophy of Eplain is that some people will always need or want to go beyond the macro designer’s idea of “appropriate”. Such canned macros are fine—as long as you are willing to accept the resulting output. If you don’t like the results, or if you are trying to match a different format, you have to put in extra work to override the defaults.

On the other hand, almost everyone would like capabilities such as cross-referencing by labels, so that you don’t have to put actual page numbers in the manuscript. The author of Eplain is not aware of any generally available macro packages that (1) do not force their typographic style on an author, and yet (2) provide such capabilities.

Besides such generic macros as cross-referencing, Eplain contains another set of definitions: ones that change the conventions of plain TeX’s output. For example, math displays in TeX are, by default, centered. If you want your displays to come out left-justified, you have to plow through The TeXbook to find some way to do it, and then adapt the code to your own needs. Eplain tries to take care of the messy details of such things, while still leaving the detailed appearance of the output up to you.

Finally, numerous definitions turned out to be useful as Eplain was developed. They are also documented in this manual, on the chance that people writing other macros will be able to use them.

You can send bug reports or suggestions to tex-eplain@tug.org. The current version number of Eplain is defined as the macro \fmtversion at the end of the source file eplain.tex. When corresponding, please refer to it.

To get on this mailing list yourself, email tex-eplain-request@tug.org with a message whose body contains a line

subscribe you@your.preferred.address

or visit http://lists.tug.org/tex-eplain.

David Walden had reported his experience with Eplain as a new user. The article is available online at http://tug.org/pracjourn/2005-4/walden. An introductory article (written for TUGboat) is also available online at http://tug.org/eplain/misc/tb84katsi.pdf.


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2 Installation

Your TeX installation should already contain a version of Eplain (eplain.tex) in its main texmf tree (usually under /usr/share/texmf/tex/eplain/ on Unix systems). To install a newer version of Eplain, put the new eplain.tex (included in Eplain distributions) in the tex/eplain/ subdirectory of your local texmf tree. The newer version you install in the local tree should override the older one in the main tree.

The location of the local texmf tree obviously depends on your operating system and TeX installation. On Unix systems the usual location is /usr/local/share/texmf/. If you don’t have write permissions for /usr/local/share/texmf/, many installations read the texmf tree in the user’s home directory; eplain.tex then should go under ~/texmf/tex/eplain/. For more information about TeX directory structure, please see http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html?label=tds.

If you prefer to install eplain.tex in a non-standard place, set an environment variable (TEXINPUTS for the Web2C port of TeX to Unix) to tell TeX how to find it.

If you want, you can also create a format (.fmt) file for Eplain, which will eliminate the time spent reading the macro source file with \input. You do this by issuing a sequence of Unix commands something like this:

prompt$ touch eplain.aux
prompt$ initex
This is TeX, ...
**&plain eplain
(eplain.tex)
*\dump
... messages ...

You must make sure that eplain.aux exists before you run initex; otherwise, warning messages about undefined labels will never be issued.

You then have to install the resulting eplain.fmt in your local texmf tree or set an environment variable to tell TeX how to find it. For the Web2C port of TeX to Unix, format files are usually installed under /usr/local/share/texmf/web2c/ or /var/lib/texmf/web2c/; the environment variable is TEXFORMATS.


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3 Invoking Eplain

The simplest way to use Eplain is simply to put:

\input eplain

at the beginning of your input file. The macro file is small enough that reading it does not take an unbearably long time—at least on contemporary machines.

In addition, if a format (.fmt) file has been created for Eplain (see the previous section), you can eliminate the time spent reading the macro source file. You do this by responding &eplain to TeX’s ‘**’ prompt. For example:

initex
This is TeX, ...
**&eplain myfile

Depending on the implementation of TeX which you are using, you might also be able to invoke TeX as eplain and have the format file automatically read.

If you write something which you will be distributing to others, you won’t know if the Eplain format will be loaded already. If it is, then doing \input eplain will waste time; if it isn’t, then you must load it. To solve this, Eplain defines the control sequence \eplain to be the letter t (a convention borrowed from Lisp; it doesn’t actually matter what the definition is, only that the definition exists). Therefore, you can do the following:

\ifx\eplain\undefined \input eplain \fi

where \undefined must never acquire a definition.

Eplain consists of several source files:

xeplain.tex

most of the macros;

arrow.tex

commutative diagram macros (see Arrow theoretic diagrams), written by Steven Smith;

btxmac.tex

bibliography-related macros (see Citations);

ifpdf.sty

sets the switch \ifpdf, which can be used to detect pdfTeX in PDF mode (see Checking for PDF output), written by Heiko Oberdiek;

path.sty

macro for allowing line breaks at punctuation characters within long pathnames, electronic mail addresses, etc., (see Paths), written by Philip Taylor;

texnames.sty

abbreviations for various TeX-related names (see Logos), edited by Nelson Beebe.

The file eplain.tex is all of these files merged together, with comments removed. The original sources can be found in Eplain source zip archive in your TeX distribution, on CTAN or on Eplain’s home page at http://tug.org/eplain.

All of these files except xeplain.tex can be input individually, if all you want are the definitions in that file.

Also, since the bibliography macros are fairly extensive, you might not want to load them, to conserve TeX’s memory. Therefore, if the control sequence \nobibtex is defined, then the bibliography definitions are skipped. You must set \nobibtex before eplain.tex is read, naturally. For example, you could start your input file like this:

\let\nobibtex = t
\input eplain

By default, \nobibtex is undefined, and so the bibliography definitions are made.

Likewise, define \noarrow if you don’t want to include the commutative diagram macros from arrow.tex, perhaps because you already have conflicting ones.

If you don’t want to read or write an aux file at all, for any kind of cross-referencing, define \noauxfile before reading eplain.tex. This also turns off all warnings about undefined labels.

Eplain conflicts with AMSTeX (to be precise, with amsppt.sty): the macros \cite and \ref are defined by both.

If you want to use AMSTeX’s \cite, the solution is to define \nobibtex before reading Eplain, as described above.

If you have amsppt.sty loaded and use \ref, Eplain writes a warning on your terminal. If you want to use the AMSTeX \ref, do \let\ref = \amsref after reading Eplain. To avoid the warning, do \let\ref = \eplainref after reading Eplain and before using \ref.

Sometimes you may need to run TeX more then once on your .tex file in order to produce and typeset indexes, resolve undefined cross-references and/or citations. The shell script texi2dvi from the Texinfo documentation system (see http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo) can automate this process: it runs BibTeX, MakeIndex and TeX as many times as needed to complete the compilation process. You will need to set the LATEX environment variable to ‘tex’. For example, in a Bourne-compatible shell, the following command will do all the work:

prompt$ LATEX=tex texi2dvi file.tex

(Despite the name, texi2dvi can also produce .pdf files; just set ‘LATEX=pdftex’.) See the output from the command texi2dvi --help for invoking information and a full list of options.


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4 User definitions

This chapter describes definitions that are meant to be used directly in a document. When appropriate, ways to change the default formatting are described in subsections.


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4.1 Diagnostics

Plain TeX provides the \tracingall command, to turn on the maximum amount of tracing possible in TeX. The (usually voluminous) output from \tracingall goes both on the terminal and into the transcript file. It is sometimes easier to have the output go only to the transcript file, so you can peruse it at your leisure and not obscure other output to the terminal. So, Eplain provides the command \loggingall. (For some reason, this command is available in Metafont, but not in TeX.)

It is also sometimes useful to see the complete contents of boxes. \tracingboxes does this. (It doesn’t affect whether or not the contents are shown on the terminal.)

You can turn off all tracing with \tracingoff.

You can also turn logging on and off globally, so you don’t have to worry about whether or not you’re inside a group at the time of command. These variants are named \gloggingall and \gtracingall.

Finally, if you write your own help messages (see \newhelp in The TeXbook), you want a convenient way to break lines in them. This is what TeX’s \newlinechar parameter is for; however, plain TeX doesn’t set \newlinechar. Therefore, Eplain defines it to be the character ^^J.

For example, one of Eplain’s own error messages is defined as follows:

\newhelp\envhelp{Perhaps you forgot to end the previous^^J%
   environment? I'm finishing off the current group,^^J%
   hoping that will fix it.}%

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4.2 Rules

The default dimensions of rules are defined in chapter 21 of the The TeXbook. To sum up what is given there, the “thickness” of rules is 0.4pt by default. Eplain defines three parameters that let you change this dimension: \hruledefaultheight, \hruledefaultdepth, and \vruledefaultwidth. By default, they are defined as The TeXbook describes.

But it would be wrong to redefine \hrule and \vrule. For one thing, some macros in plain TeX depend on the default dimensions being used; for another, rules are used quite heavily, and the performance impact of making it a macro can be noticeable. Therefore, to take advantage of the default rule parameters, you must use \ehrule and \evrule.


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4.3 Citations

Bibliographies are part of almost every technical document. To handle them conveniently, you need two things: a program to do the tedious formatting, and a way to cite references by labels, rather than by numbers. The BibTeX program, written by Oren Patashnik, takes care of the first item; the citation commands in LaTeX, written to be used with BibTeX, take care of the second. Therefore, Eplain adopts the use of BibTeX, and virtually the same interface as LaTeX.

The general idea is that you put citation commands in the text of your document, and commands saying where the bibliography data is. When you run TeX, these commands produce output on the file with the same root name as your document (by default) and the extension .aux. BibTeX reads this file. You should put the bibliography data in a file or files with the extension .bib. BibTeX writes out a file with the same root name as your document and extension .bbl. Eplain reads this file the next time you run your document through TeX. (It takes multiple passes to get everything straight, because usually after seeing your bibliography typeset, you want to make changes in the .bib file, which means you have to run BibTeX again, which means you have to run TeX again…) An annotated example of the whole process is given below.

If your document has more than one bibliography—for example, if it is a collection of papers—you can tell Eplain to use a different root name for the .bbl file by defining the control sequence \bblfilebasename. The default definition is simply \jobname.

On the other hand, if your document’s bibliography is very simple, you may prefer to create the .bbl file yourself, by hand, instead of using BibTeX. An annotated example of this approach is also given below.

See the document BibTeXing (whose text is in the file btxdoc.tex, which should be in the Eplain distribution you got) for information on how to write your .bib files. Both the BibTeX and the Eplain distributions contain several examples, also.

The \cite command produces a citation in the text of your document. The exact printed form the citation will take is under your control (see Formatting citations). \cite takes one required argument, a comma-separated list of cross-reference labels (see Cross-references, for exactly what characters are allowed in such labels). Warning: spaces in this list are taken as part of the following label name, which is probably not what you expect. The \cite command also produces a command in the .aux file that tells BibTeX to retrieve the given reference(s) from the .bib file. \cite also takes one optional argument, which you specify within square brackets, as in LaTeX. This text is simply typeset after the citations. (See the example below.)

Eplain can create hypertext links for citations pointing to the relevant bibliography entries (see Citation hyperlinks).

Another command, \nocite, puts the given reference(s) into the bibliography, but produces nothing in the text.

The \bibliography command is next. It serves two purposes: producing the typeset bibliography, and telling BibTeX the root names of the .bib files. Therefore, the argument to \bibliography is a comma separated list of the .bib files (without the ‘.bib’). Again, spaces in this list are significant.

You tell BibTeX the particular style in which you want your bibliography typeset with one more command: \bibliographystyle. The argument to this is a single filename style, which tells BibTeX to look for a file style.bst. See the document Designing BibTeX styles (whose text is in the btxhak.tex) for information on how to write your own styles.

Eplain automatically reads the citations from the .aux file when your job starts.

If you don’t want to see the messages about undefined citations, you can say \xrefwarningfalse before making any citations. Eplain automatically does this if the .aux file does not exist. You can restore the default by saying \xrefwarningtrue.

Here is a TeX input file that illustrates the various commands.

\input eplain                    % Reads the .aux file.
Two citations to Knuthian works:
  \cite[note]{surreal,concrete-math}.
\beginsection{References.}\par   % Title for the bibliography.
\bibliography{knuth}             % Use knuth.bib for the labels.
\bibliographystyle{plain}        % Number the references.
\end                             % End of the document.

If we suppose that this file was named citex.tex and that the bibliography data is in knuth.bib (as the above \bibliography command says), the following commands do what’s required. (‘$ ’ represents the shell prompt.)

$ tex citex     (produces undefined citation messages)
$ bibtex citex  (read knuth.bib and citex.aux, write citex.bbl)
$ tex citex     (read citex.bbl, still have undefined citations)
$ tex citex     (one more time, to resolve the references)

The texi2dvi program can help you automate this process (see Invoking Eplain).

For simple documents you might choose to write the .bbl file yourself, instead of running BibTeX. For this scenario, the following commands should suffice:

$ tex citex     (read citex.bbl, produces undefined citation messages)
$ tex citex     (one more time, to resolve the references)

The output looks something like (because we used the plain bibliography style):

Two citations to Knuthian works: [2,1 note].

References

[1] Ronald L. Graham, Donald E. Knuth, and Oren Patashnik. Concrete Mathematics. Addison-Wesley, Reading, Massachusetts, 1989.

[2] Donald E. Knuth. Surreal Numbers. Addison-Wesley, Reading, Massachusetts, 1974.

See the BibTeX documentation for information on how to write the bibliography databases, and the bibliography styles that are available. (If you want your references printed with names, as in [Knu74], instead of numbered, the bibliography style is alpha.)


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4.3.1 Formatting citations

You may wish to change Eplain’s formatting of citations; i.e., the result of your \cite commands. By default, the citation labels are printed one after another, separated by commas and enclosed in brackets, using the main text font. Some formats require other styles, such as superscripted labels. You can accomodate such formats by redefining the following macros.

\printcitestart
\printcitefinish

Eplain expands these macros at the begining and end of the list of citations for each \cite command. By default, they produce a ‘[’ and ‘]’, respectively.

\printbetweencitations

If a \cite command has multiple citations, as in \cite{acp,texbook}, Eplain expands this macro in between each pair of citations. By default, it produces a comma followed by a space.

\printcitenote

This macro takes one argument, which is the optional note to the \cite command. If the \cite command had no note, this macro isn’t used. Otherwise, it should print the note. By default, the note is preceded with a comma and a space.

Here is an example, showing you could produce citations as superscripted labels, with the optional notes in parentheses.

\def\printcitestart{\unskip $^\bgroup}
\def\printbetweencitations{,}
\def\printcitefinish{\egroup$}
\def\printcitenote#1{\hbox{\sevenrm\space (#1)}}

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4.3.2 Formatting bibliographies

You may wish to change Eplain’s formatting of the bibliography, especially with respect to the fonts that are used. Therefore, Eplain provides the following control sequences:

\biblabelwidth

This control sequence represents a \dimen register, and its value is the width of the widest label in the bibliography. Although it is unlikely you will ever want to redefine it, you might want to use it if you redefine \biblabelprint, below.

\biblabelprint

This macro takes one argument, the label to print. By default, the label is put in a box of width \biblabelwidth, and is followed by an enspace. When you want to change the spacing around the labels, this is the right macro to redefine.

\biblabelcontents

This macro also takes one argument, the label to print. By default, the label is printed using the font \bblrm (below), and enclosed in brackets. When you want to change the appearance of the label, but not the spacing around it, this is the right macro to redefine.

\biblabelprecontents
\biblabelpostcontents

Macros expanded before and after \biblabelcontents, respectively. For example, to get left-justified numeric labels (they are right-justified by default):

\def\biblabelprecontents{\relax}
\def\biblabelpostcontents{\hss}
\bblrm

The default font used for printing the bibliography.

\bblem

The font used for printing the titles and other “emphasized” material.

\bblemph

Typesets its argument using \bblem, then inserts an italic correction.

\bblsc

In some styles, authors’ names are printed in a caps-and-small-caps font. In those cases, this font is used.

\bblnewblock

This is invoked between each of the parts of a bibliography entry. The default is to leave some extra space between the parts; you could redefine it to start each part on a new line (for example). A part is simply a main element of the entry; for example, the author is a part. (It was LaTeX that introduced the (misleading, as far as I am concerned) term ‘block’ for this.)

\biblabelextraspace

Bibliography entries are typeset with a hanging indentation of \biblabelwidth plus this. The default is .5em, where the em width is taken from the \bblrm font. If you want to change this, you should do it inside \bblhook.

\bblhook

This is expanded before reading the .bbl file. By default, it does nothing. You could, for example, define it to set the bibliography fonts, or produce the heading for the references. Two spacing parameters must be changed inside \bblhook: \parskip, which produces extra space between the items; and \biblabelextraspace, which is described above. (By the way, \hookappend won’t work with \bblhook, despite the names. Just use \def.)

If you are desperate, of course you can also hand-edit the .bbl file that BibTeX produces to do anything you wish.


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4.3.3 Commands from LaTeX

Because of the historical connection between BibTeX and LaTeX, in practice many bibliography styles and bibliographies use LaTeX commmands that are not part of bibliography handling, per se.

To support this, btxmac.tex (and thus Eplain) define the following. In all cases, an existing definition (e.g., from miniltx.tex, see Loading LaTeX packages) will not be overwritten. Here is the list:

\newcommand
\renewcommand
\providecommand

Defining new commands in various ways. The Eplain versions do not support the *-form of these; use miniltx for that.

\em
\emph
\sc
\textbf

Selecting fonts.

\mbox

A horizontal box.

\newblock

Starts elements of a bibliography entry.

For full information about these, see the LaTeX manual and sources.


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4.4 Displays

By default, TeX centers displayed material. (Displayed material is just whatever you put between $$’s—it’s not necessarily mathematics.) Many layouts would be better served if the displayed material was left-justified. Therefore, Eplain provides the command \leftdisplays, which indents displayed material by \parindent plus \leftskip, plus \leftdisplayindent.

You can go back to centering displays with \centereddisplays. (It is usually poor typography to have both centered and left-justified displays in a single publication, though.)

\leftdisplays also changes the plain TeX commands that deal with alignments inside math displays, \displaylines, \eqalignno, and \leqalignno, to produce left-justified text. You can still override this formatting by inserting \hfill glue, as explained in The TeXbook.

Eplain defines \eqnum and \eqalignnum which can be set up to produce either left-aligned or right-aligned equation numbers. \lefteqnumbers (\righteqnumbers) will define \eqnum to expand to \eqno (\leqno), and \eqalignnum to expand to \eqalignno (\leqalignno). Default is \righteqnumbers (right-aligned equation numbers).


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4.4.1 Formatting displays

If you want some other kind of formatting, you can write a definition of your own, analogous to \leftdisplays. You need only make sure that \leftdisplaysetup is called at the beginning of every display (presumably by invoking it in TeX’s \everydisplay parameter).

\leftdisplays expands the old value of \everydisplay before calling \leftdisplaysetup, so that any changes you have made to it won’t be lost. That old token list as available as the value of the token register \previouseverydisplay.


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4.5 Time of day

TeX provides the day, month, and year as numeric quantities (unless your TeX implementation is woefully deficient). Eplain provides some control sequences to make them a little more friendly to humans.

\monthname produces the name of the current month, abbreviated to three letters.

\fullmonthname produces the name of the current month, unabbreviated (in English).

\timestring produces the current time, as in ‘1:14 p.m.’

\timestamp produces the current date and time, as in ‘23 Apr 64 1:14 p.m.’. (Except the spacing is slightly different.)

\today produces the current date, as in ‘23 April 1964’.


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4.6 Lists

Many documents require lists of items, either numbered or simply enumerated. Plain TeX defines one macro to help with creating lists, \item, but that is insufficient in many cases. Therefore, Eplain provides two pairs of commands:

\numberedlist … \endnumberedlist
\orderedlist … \endorderedlist

These commands (they are synonyms) produce a list with the items numbered sequentially, starting from one. A nested \numberedlist labels the items with lowercase letters, starting with ‘a’. Another nested \numberedlist labels the items with roman numerals. Yet more deeply nested numbered lists label items with ‘*’.

\unorderedlist … \endunorderedlist

This produces a list with the items labelled with small black boxes (“square bullets”). A nested \unorderedlist labels items with em-dashes. Doubly (and deeper) nested unordered lists label items with ‘*’s.

The two kinds of lists can be nested within each other, as well.

In both kinds of lists, you begin an item with \li. An item may continue for several paragraphs. Each item starts a paragraph.

You can give \li an optional argument, a cross-reference label. It’s defined to be the “marker” for the current item. This is useful if the list items are numbered. You can produce the value of the label with \xrefn. See Cross-references.

Eplain can create hypertext links for the markers produced by \xrefn pointing to the relevant list item (see List hyperlinks).

You can also say \listcompact right after \numberedlist or \unorderedlist. The items in the list will then not have any extra space between them (see Formatting lists). You might want to do this if the items in this particular list are short.

Here is an example:

\numberedlist\listcompact
\li The first item.
\li The second item.

The second paragraph of the second item.
\endnumberedlist

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4.6.1 Formatting lists

Several registers define the spacing associated with lists. It is likely that their default values won’t suit your particular layout.

\abovelistskipamount, \belowlistskipamount

The vertical glue inserted before and after every list, respectively.

\interitemskipamount

The vertical glue inserted before each item except the first. \listcompact resets this to zero, as mentioned above.

\listleftindent, \listrightindent

\listrightindent is the amount of space by which the list is indented on the right; i.e., it is added to \rightskip. \listleftindent is the amount of space, relative to \parindent, by which the list is indented on the left. Why treat the two parameters differently? Because (a) it is more useful to make the list indentation depend on the paragraph indentation; (b) footnotes aren’t formatted right if \parindent is reset to zero.

The three vertical glues are inserted by macros, and preceded by penalties: \abovelistskip does \vpenalty\abovelistpenalty and then \vskip\abovelistskip. \belowlistskip and \interitemskip are analogous.

In addition, the macro \listmarkerspace is called to separate the item label from the item text. This is set to \enspace by default.

If you want to change the labels on the items, you can redefine these macros: \numberedmarker or \unorderedmarker. The following registers might be useful if you do:

\numberedlistdepth, \unorderedlistdepth

These keep track of the depth of nesting of the two kinds of lists.

\itemnumber, \itemletter

These keep track of the number of items that have been seen in the current numbered list. They are both integer registers. The difference is that \itemnumber starts at one, and \itemletter starts at 97, i.e., lowercase ‘a’.

You can also redefine the control sequences that are used internally, if you want to do something radically different: \beginlist is invoked to begin both kinds of lists; \printitem is invoked to print the label (and space following the label) for each item; and \endlist is invoked to end both kinds of lists.


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4.7 Verbatim listing

It is sometimes useful to include a file verbatim in your document; for example, part of a computer program. The \listing command is given one argument, a filename, and produces the contents of that file in your document. \listing expands \listingfont to set the current font. The default value of \listingfont is \tt.

You can take arbitrary actions before reading the file by defining the macro \setuplistinghook. This is expanded just before the file is input.

If you want to have line numbers on the output, you can say \let\setuplistinghook = \linenumberedlisting. The line numbers are stored in the count register \lineno while the file is being read. You can redefine the macro \printlistinglineno to change how they are printed.

Normally, the \listing command will add a final empty line at the end of the output, even if the file does not end in a newline. To suppress this final line, you can say \let\setuplistinghook = \nolastlinelisting. This also works with line numbers (say \def\setuplistinghook{\linenumberedlisting \nolastlinelisting}), but only if \printlistinglineno consists exclusively of boxes at the top level (i.e., any \kerns or glue should be wrapped up in a box).

You can use the form feed control character (ASCII code 12, typed as CTRL-L) in the file to force a page break in the output.

You can produce in-line verbatim text in your document with \verbatim. End the text with |endverbatim. If you need a ‘|’ in the text, double it. If the first character of the verbatim text is a space, use | . (| will work elsewhere in the argument, too, but isn’t necessary.)

For example:

\verbatim| ||\#%&!|endverbatim

produces |\#%&!.

Line breaks and spaces in the verbatim text are preserved.

You can change the verbatim escape character from the default ‘|’ with \verbatimescapechar char; for example, this changes it to ‘@’.

\verbatimescapechar \@

The backslash is not necessary in some cases, but is in others, depending on the catcode of the character. The argument to \verbatimescapechar is used as \catcode `char, so the exact rules follow that for \catcode.

To reset the category code of all special characters to 12 (“other”), \verbatim uses \uncatcodespecials (see Category codes). If you make additional characters “special”, you should extend \dospecials to include those characters, lest they be given special treatment inside verbatim environments. For example,

\catcode`\A=\active
% Try commenting out the following line.
\expandafter\def\expandafter\dospecials\expandafter{\dospecials\do\A}
\verbatimA#$%_^|endverbatim

Because \verbatim must change the category code of special characters, calling inside a macro definition of your own does not work properly. For example:

\def\mymacro{\verbatim &#%|endverbatim}% Doesn't work!

To accomplish this, you must change the category codes yourself before making the macro definition. Perhaps \uncatcodespecials will help you (see Category codes).


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4.8 Contents

Producing a table of contents that is both useful and aesthetic is one of the most difficult design problems in any work. Naturally, Eplain does not pretend to solve the design problem. Collecting the raw data for a table of contents, however, is much the same across documents. Eplain uses an auxiliary file with extension .toc (and the same root name as your document) to save the information.


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4.8.1 Writing the .toc file

To write an entry for the table of contents, you say \writetocentry{part}{text}, where part is the type of part this entry is, e.g., ‘chapter’, and text is the text of the title. \writetocentry puts an entry into the .toc file that looks like \tocpartentry{text}{page number} (unless part is an integer, see below). The text is written unexpanded.

A related command, \writenumberedtocentry, takes one additional argument, the first token of which is expanded at the point of the \writenumberedtocentry, but the rest of the argument is not expanded. The usual application is when the parts of the document are numbered. On the other hand, the one-level expansion allows you to use the argument for other things as well (author’s names in a proceedings, say), and not have accents or other control sequences expanded. The downside is that if you want full expansion of the third argument, you don’t get it—you must expand it yourself, before you call \writenumberedtocentry.

For example:

\writenumberedtocentry{chapter}{A $\sin$ wave}{\the\chapno}
\writetocentry{section}{A section title}

Supposing \the\chapno expanded to ‘3’ and that the \write’s occurred on pages eight and nine, respectively, the above writes the following to the .toc file:

\tocchapterentry{A $\sin$ wave}{3}{8}
\tocsectionentry{A section title}{9}

A variation on \writenumberedtocentry is \writenumberedtocline, differing only in the order of the parameters it takes and writes for the \tocpartentry control sequences. To continue the previous example:

\writenumberedtocline{chapter}{\the\chapno}{A $\sin$ wave}

writes the following to the .toc file:

\tocchapterentry{3}{A $\sin$ wave}{8}

Such ordering of the parameters allows the \tocpartentry macros to typeset the text of the entry without actually reading it as an argument. This is required for entries which need to change character catcodes, e.g., to produce verbatim text (see Verbatim listing).

Each of \writetocentry, \writenumberedtocentry and \writenumberedtocline processes a numeric part argument specially. If you pass part expanding to an integer, these macros write into the .toc file an entry that starts with \tocentry{part}. Thus, you can define a single \tocentry macro which formats all entries for a table of contents. To continue the previous examples:

\writenumberedtocentry{1}{A $\sin$ wave}{\the\chapno}
\writenumberedtocline{1}{\the\chapno}{A $\sin$ wave}
\writetocentry{2}{A section title}

writes the following to the .toc file:

\tocentry{1}{A $\sin$ wave}{3}{8}
\tocentry{1}{3}{A $\sin$ wave}{8}
\tocentry{2}{A section title}{9}

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4.8.2 Reading the .toc file

You read the .toc file with the command \readtocfile. Naturally, whatever \toc… entry commands that were written to the file must be defined when \readtocfile is invoked. Eplain has minimal definitions for \tocchapterentry, \tocsectionentry, and \tocsubsectionentry, just to prevent undefined control sequence errors in common cases. They aren’t suitable for anything but preliminary proofs.

Each of \writetocentry, \writenumberedtocentry and \writenumberedtocline opens the .toc file for writing, thereby deleting the information from the previous run. You should therefore arrange that \readtocfile be called before the first call to a \writetoc… macro. \readtocfile does not itself delete the information from the .toc file, so that you can call it several times, e.g., to create both a short and normal table of contents. (To produce this in particular, define \tocsectionentry to produce nothing while you are reading .toc file for a short table of contents (see Macro arguments).)

On the other hand, if you don’t want to rewrite the .toc file at all, perhaps because you are only running TeX on part of your manuscript, you can set \rewritetocfilefalse.


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4.8.3 Changing the .toc file’s root name

By default, the .toc file has the root \jobname. If your document has more than one contents—for example, if it is a collection of papers, some of which have their own contents—you can tell Eplain to use a different root name by defining the control sequence \tocfilebasename.

Note that \writetocentry, \writenumberedtocentry and \writenumberedtocline will open the contents file for writing only at the first call, using the value of \tocfilebasename at that time. Changing the value of \tocfilebasename afterwards will not affect which file gets written, although it will affect which file gets read by \readcontentsfile. In case you need to write several contents files from a single TeX job, use \definecontentsfile (see Alternative contents files).


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4.8.4 Alternative contents files

In addition to the usual table of contents, you may want to have a list of figures, list of tables, or other such contents-like list. You can do this with \definecontentsfile{abbrev}. All of the above commands are actually a special case that Eplain predefines with

\definecontentsfile{toc}

The abbrev is used both for the file extension and in the control sequence names.


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4.9 Cross-references

It is often useful to refer the reader to other parts of your document; but putting literal page, section, equation, or whatever numbers in the text is certainly a bad thing.

Eplain therefore provides commands for symbolic cross-references. It uses an auxiliary file with extension .aux (and the same root name as your document) to keep track of the information. Therefore, it takes two passes to get the cross-references right—one to write them out, and one to read them in. Eplain automatically reads the .aux file at the first reference; after reading it, Eplain reopens it for writing.

You can control whether or not Eplain warns you about undefined labels. See Citations.

Labels in Eplain’s cross-reference commands can use characters of category code eleven (letter), twelve (other), ten (space), three (math shift), four (alignment tab), seven (superscript), or eight (subscript). For example, ‘(a1 $&^_’ is a valid label (assuming the category codes of plain TeX), but ‘%#\{’ has no valid characters.

You can also do symbolic cross-references for bibliographic citations and list items. See Citations, and Lists.

Eplain can create hypertext links for the cross-references (see Cross-reference hyperlinks).


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4.9.1 Defining generic references

Eplain provides the command \definexref for general cross-references. It takes three arguments: the name of the label (see section above for valid label names), the value of the label (which can be anything), and the “class” of the reference—whether it’s a section, or theorem, or what. For example:

\definexref{sec-intro}{3.1}{section}

Of course, the label value is usually generated by another macro using TeX count registers or some such.

\definexref doesn’t actually define label; instead, it writes out the definition to the .aux file, where Eplain will read it on the next TeX run.

The class argument is used by the \ref and \refs commands. See the next section.


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4.9.2 Using generic references

To retrieve the value of the label defined via \definexref (see the previous section), Eplain provides the following macros:

\refn{label}
\xrefn{label}

\refn and \xrefn (they are synonyms) produce the bare definition of label. If label isn’t defined, issue a warning, and produce label itself instead, in typewriter. (The warning isn’t given if \xrefwarningfalse.)

\ref{label}

Given the class c for label (see the description of \definexref in the previous section), expand the control sequence \c word (if it’s defined) followed by a tie. Then call \refn on label. (Example below.)

\refs{label}

Like \ref, but append the letter ‘s’ to the \…word.

The purpose of the \…word macro is to produce the word ‘Section’ or ‘Figure’ or whatever that usually precedes the actual reference number.

Here is an example:

\def\sectionword{Section}
\definexref{sec-intro}{3.1}{section}
\definexref{sec-next}{3.2}{section}
See \refs{sec-intro} and \refn{sec-next} …

This produces ‘See Sections 3.1 and 3.2 …’


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4.10 Page references

Eplain provides two commands for handling references to page numbers, one for definition and one for use.

\xrdef{label}

Define label to be the current page number. This produces no printed output, and ignores following spaces.

\xref{label}

Produce the text ‘p. pageno’, which is the usual form for cross-references. The pageno is actually label’s definition; if label isn’t defined, the text of the label itself is printed. The ‘p. ’ prefix is defined by \xrefpageword. Its default definition is p.\thinspace.

Eplain can create hypertext links for the page references (see Page reference hyperlinks).


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4.11 Equation references

Instead of referring to pages, it’s most useful if equation labels refer to equation numbers. Therefore, Eplain reserves a \count register, \eqnumber, for the current equation number, and increments it at each numbered equation.

Here are the commands to define equation labels and then refer to them:

\eqdef{label}

This defines label to be the current value of \eqnumber, and, if the current context is not inner, then produces a \eqnum command (see Displays). (The condition makes it possible to use \eqdef in an \eqalignno construction, for example.) The text of the equation number is produced using \eqprint. See Formatting equation references.

If label is empty, you still get an equation number (although naturally you can’t reliably refer to it). This is useful if you want to put numbers on all equations in your document, and you don’t want to think up unique labels.

To refer to the last equation with the empty label, you just use the empty label in one of the equation reference macros (see below). This can be handy when you want to refer to an equation shortly after its definition, say, in the sentence following the displayed equation, and do not intend to refer to the equation later. But use this trick with extreme caution: if later you change the text and insert another empty definition between the original definition and the reference, the reference will start to refer to the new empty-labeled equation.

\eqdefn{label}

This is like \eqdef, except it always omits the \eqnum command. It can therefore be used in places where \eqdef can’t; for example, in a non-displayed equation. The text of the equation number is not produced, so you can also use it in the (admittedly unusual) circumstance when you want to define an equation label but not print that label.

\eqref{label}

This produces a formatted reference to label. If label is undefined (perhaps because it is a forward reference), it just produces the text of the label itself. Otherwise, it calls \eqprint.

\eqrefn{label}

This produces the cross-reference text for label. That is, it is like \eqref, except it doesn’t call \eqprint.

Equation labels can contain the same characters that are valid in general cross-references.

Eplain can create hypertext links for the equation references (see Equation reference hyperlinks).


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4.11.1 Formatting equation references

Both defining an equation label and referring to it should usually produce output. This output is produced with the \eqprint macro, which takes one argument, the equation number being defined or referred to. By default, this just produces ‘(number)’, where number is the equation number. To produce the equation number in a different font, or with different surrounding symbols, or whatever, you can redefine \eqprint. For example, the following definition would print all equation numbers in italics. (The extra braces define a group, to keep the font change from affecting surrounding text.)

\def\eqprint#1{{\it (#1)}}

In addition to changing the formatting of equation numbers, you might want to add more structure to the equation number; for example, you might want to include the chapter number, to get equation numbers like ‘(1.2)’. To achieve this, you redefine \eqconstruct. For example:

\def\eqconstruct#1{\the\chapternumber.#1}

(If you are keeping the chapter number in a count register named \chapternumber, naturally.)

The reason for having both \eqconstruct and \eqprint may not be immediately apparent. The difference is that \eqconstruct affects the text that cross-reference label is defined to be, while \eqprint affects only what is typeset on the page. The example just below might help.

Usually, you want equation labels to refer to equation numbers. But sometimes you might want a more complicated text. For example, you might have an equation ‘(1)’, and then have a variation several pages later which you want to refer to as ‘(1*)’.

Therefore, Eplain allows you to give an optional argument (i.e., arbitrary text in square brackets) before the cross-reference label to \eqdef. Then, when you refer to the equation, that text is produced. Here’s how to get the example just mentioned:

$$…\eqdef{a-eq}$$
…
$$…\eqdef[\eqrefn{a-eq}*]{a-eq-var}$$
In \eqref{a-eq-var}, we expand on \eqref{a-eq}, …

We use \eqrefn in the cross-reference text, not \eqref, so that \eqprint is called only once.

As another example, consider the following requirement: we want to include chapter number in all equation references, and additionally we want to include the part number when referencing an equation from any part other than the one where the equation appears. For example, references to the third equation in chapter 2 of part 1 should be typeset as ‘(2.3)’ throughout part 1, but as ‘(I.2.3)’ in any other part. Let’s assume we have the current chapter and part numbers in count registers \chapnum and \partnum, respectively.

The idea is to have \eqconstruct store the part number of the equation (that is, the part number at the time of definition), so that later \eqprint can compare the stored number with the current part number (that is, the part number at the time of reference). The complicating factor is that internally, the result of \eqconstruct is both expanded and written out to the .aux file, and used to typeset the equation number, so the commands that store the part number should behave correctly in both situations. This is difficult to achieve with expandable commands; therefore, to avoid expansion problems, we are going to use only TeX primitives, which are non-expandable:

\newcount\eqpartnum

\def\eqconstruct#1{%
  \global\eqpartnum=\the\partnum\relax
  \number\chapnum.#1%
}

\def\eqprint#1{%
  \setbox0=\hbox{#1}%
  (\ifnum\partnum=\eqpartnum \else
     \uppercase\expandafter{\romannumeral\eqpartnum}.%
   \fi
   \box0)%
}%

In \eqconstruct, besides constructing the base equation number (e.g., ‘1.2’), we also store the part number of the equation in the count register \eqpartnum (\the\partnum is expanded when the equation number is written to the .aux file, so the equation label definition in the .aux file will contain the actual part number). In \eqprint, we need to know the equation’s part number before we typeset the base equation number, therefore we first put the argument in a box, thus causing \eqpartnum to be set.


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4.11.2 Subequation references

Eplain also provides for one level of substructure for equations. That is, you might want to define a related group of equations with numbers like ‘2.1’ and ‘2.2’, and then be able to refer to the group as a whole: “… in the system of equations (2)…”.

The commands to do this are \eqsubdef and \eqsubdefn. They take one label argument like their counterparts above, and generally behave in the same way. The difference is in how they construct the equation number: instead of using just \eqnumber, they also use another counter, \subeqnumber. This counter is advanced by one at every \eqsubdef or \eqsubdefn, and reset to zero at every \eqdef or \eqdefn.

You use \eqref to refer to subequations as well as main equations.

To put the two together to construct the text that the label will produce, they use a macro \eqsubreftext. This macros takes two arguments, the “main” equation number (which, because the equation label can be defined as arbitrary text, as described in the previous section, might be anything at all) and the “sub” equation number (which is always just a number). Eplain’s default definition just puts a period between them:

\def\eqsubreftext#1#2{#1.#2}%

You can redefine \eqsubreftext to print however you like. For example, this definition makes the labels print as ‘2a’, ‘2b’, and so on.

\newcount\subref
\def\eqsubreftext#1#2{%
  \subref = #2           % The space stops a <number>.
  \advance\subref by 96  % `a' is character code 97.
  #1\char\subref
}

Sadly, we must define a new count register, \subref, instead of using the scratch count register \count255, because ‘#1’ might include other macro calls which use \count255.


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4.12 Indexing

Eplain provides support for generating raw material for an index, and for typesetting a sorted index. A separate program must do the actual collection and sorting of terms, because TeX itself has no support for sorting.

Eplain can create hypertext links pointing from the index to the index terms (see Index hyperlinks).

Eplain’s indexing commands were designed to work with the program MakeIndex, available from CTAN hosts in tex-archive/indexing/makeindex; MakeIndex is also commonly included in prepackaged TeX distributions. It is beyond the scope of this manual to explain how to run MakeIndex, and all of its many options. See http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/indexing/makeindex.

The basic strategy for indexing works like this:

  1. For a document foo.tex, Eplain’s indexing commands (e.g., \idx; see the section ‘Indexing terms’ below) write the raw index material to foo.idx.
  2. MakeIndex reads foo.idx, collects and sorts the index, and writes the result to foo.ind.
  3. Eplain reads and typesets foo.ind on a subsequent run of TeX. See the section ‘Typesetting an index’ below.

The texi2dvi program can help you automate this process (see Invoking Eplain).

If your document needs more than one index, each must have its own file. Therefore, Eplain provides the command \defineindex, which takes an argument that is a single letter, which replaces ‘i’ in the filenames and in the indexing command names described below. For example,

\defineindex{m}

defines the command \mdx to write to the file foo.mdx. Eplain simply does \defineindex{i} to define the default commands.

Note that MakeIndex does not use the above naming scheme for multiple indexes. Unless instructed otherwise, MakeIndex always writes its output to a file with extension .ind. For example, if you define an additional index with the command \defineindex{j}, you’ll need to run MakeIndex like this:

$ makeindex book.jdx -o book.jnd

For each index defined with \defineindex{n}, Eplain provides a switch \ifndx which controls whether indexing commands write index entries to the corresponding index file. However, even when index term writing is disabled, indexing commands still do all other processing of their arguments, including typesetting of proof index terms (see Proofing index terms.

For example, if you write \idxfalse near the beginning of a document foo.tex (before the first indexing command), Eplain will not open the default index file (foo.idx) and the corresponding indexing commands (\idx, \sidx, etc.) will not write index entries there. This may be useful for draft compilations of a manuscript, e.g., to avoid the overhead of index file input/output.


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4.12.1 Indexing terms

Indexing commands in Eplain come in pairs: one command that only writes the index entry to the ‘.idx’ file (see above section), and one that also typesets the term being indexed. The former always starts with ‘s’ (for “silent”). In either case, the name always includes ‘Idx’, where I is the index letter, also described above. Eplain defines the index ‘i’ itself, so that’s what we’ll use in the names below.

The silent form of the commands take a subterm as a trailing optional argument. For example, \sidx{truth}[definition of] on page 75 makes an index entry that will eventually be typeset (by default) as

truth
  definition of, 75

Also, the silent commands ignore trailing spaces. The non-silent ones do not.


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4.12.1.1 Indexing commands

Here are the commands.

The commands above rely on MakeIndex’s feature for separating sorting of an index entry’s from its typesetting. You can use this directly by specifying an index entry as sort@typeset. For example:

\sidx{Ap-weight@$A_\pi$-weight}

will sort as Ap-weight, but print with the proper math. The @ here is MakeIndex’s default character for this purpose. See http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/indexing/makeindex. To make an index entry with an @ in it, you have to escape it with a backslash; Eplain provides no macros for doing this.

After any index command, Eplain runs \hookaction{afterindexterm}. Because the index commands always add a whatsit item to the current list, you may wish to preserve a penalty or space past the new item. For example, given a conditional \if@aftersctnhead set true when you’re at a section heading, you could do:

\hookaction{afterindexterm}{\if@aftersctnhead \nobreak \fi}

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4.12.1.2 Modifying index entries

All the index commands described in the previous section take an initial optional argument before the index term, which modify the index entry’s meaning in various ways. You can specify only one of the following in any given command, except that begin and end can be specified together with pagemarkup=cs (separate them with a comma without a following space, like this: [begin,pagemarkup=defn]).

These work via MakeIndex’s “encapsulation” feature. See Customizing indexing, if you’re not using the default characters for the MakeIndex operators. The other optional argument (specifying a subterm) is independent of these.

Here are the possibilities:

begin
end

These mark an index entry as the beginning or end of a range. The index entries must match exactly for MakeIndex to recognize them. Example:

\sidx[begin]{future}[Cohen, Leonard]
…
\sidx[end]{future}[Cohen, Leonard]

will typeset as something like

future,
  Cohen, Leonard, 65–94
see

This marks an index entry as pointing to another; the real index term is an additional (non-optional) argument to the command. Thus you can anticipate a term readers may wish to look up, yet which you have decided not to index. Example:

\sidx[see]{analysis}[archetypal]{archetypal criticism}

becomes

analysis,
  archetypal, see archetypal criticism
seealso

Similar to see (the previous item), but also allows for normal index entries of the referencing term. The normal index entries have to be created separately—seealso does not contribute a page number to the index entry. For example, if you have indexed a term on pages 75, 97 and 114, and then add a seealso entry for the term:

\sidx[seealso]{archetypal criticism}[elements of]{dichotomies}

the index will contain

archetypal criticism,
  elements of, 75, 97, 114, see also dichotomies

(Aside for the academically curious: The archetypally critical book I took these dichotomous examples from is Laurence Berman’s The Musical Image, which I happened to co-design and typeset.)

pagemarkup=cs

This puts \cs before the page number in the typeset index, thus allowing you to underline definitive entries, italicize examples, and the like. You do not precede the control sequence cs with a backslash. (That just leads to expansive difficulties.) Naturally it is up to you to define the control sequences you want to use. Example:

\def\defn#1{{\sl #1}}
\sidx[pagemarkeup=defn]{indexing}

becomes something like

indexing, \defn{75}

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4.12.1.3 Index entries with special characters

Indexing terms with special characters can become quite cumbersome because you have to keep both TeX and MakeIndex happy at the same time. For example, while ‘!’ has no special meaning for TeX, it is a subentry separator for MakeIndex, therefore you’d have to escape occurrences of literal ‘!’ in index terms. Things get even more interesting with characters which are special in both TeX and MakeIndex.

This in turn has some implications for the non-silent forms of the indexing commands (see Indexing terms), since TeX and MakeIndex use different conventions for escaping characters. For example, this will not typeset the exclamation point correctly within the text, while it will come out right inside the index, after MakeIndex strips the quoting character (‘"’):

\idx{"!}

This would have to be rewritten using the silent command:

!\sidx{"!}

In general, it is a good idea to eschew the non-silent commands whenever index term contains anything unusual.

To understand this keep in mind that indexing commands read the terms verbatim so that the terms can embed almost any character, and that’s what gets written into the .idx file. The non-silent forms then typeset the term by rescanning the verbatim copy, hence for the non-silent commands the term, besides being a valid MakeIndex input, must also represent a valid TeX input. The silent commands don’t have this restriction—their terms only need to become valid TeX input after MakeIndex processes the .idx file and writes the .ind file. This is what makes the non-silent commands less powerful and more troublesome when dealing with special characters.

Here’s an example showing that terms for the silent commands can contain almost any character:

\sidx[see]{comments}[with %@with \verbatim %"|endverbatim]
  {commenting with \verbatim %"|endverbatim}

We didn’t have to escape ‘%’ in the sort string for MakeIndex, while we had to put it inside the verbatim environment (see Verbatim listing) in the part which MakeIndex will pass back to TeX. Also, we had to escape the ‘|’ character because it is special for MakeIndex. If you have trouble understanding the reasons for the different types of escaping used, it is best to examine the .idx and .ind files resulting from processing the above input.

As was mentioned, index terms can embed “almost any character”, so now we’ll describe the exceptions.

The following characters are reset to their usual meanings because they are not useful verbatim: multiple consequent spaces are converted into a single space; ASCII tab characters are treated as spaces; ASCII return is treated as end-of-line (this means, among other things, that long terms can be broken across several lines).

You have to be careful with the begin- and end-group characters (‘{’ and ‘}’ by default). If they are matched, you don’t have to do anything special. For example:

\sidx {braces {, }@braces
  \verbatim {"|endverbatim, \verbatim }"|endverbatim}

However, if they are not matched you have two problems on hand. The first one is TeX—you have to instruct TeX to use something else as begin- and/or end-group characters. Eplain provides an easy way to do this: just define \idxargopen and/or \idxargclose to the begin- and end-group characters you are going to use with indexing macros, and use braces inside index terms without any restrictions. Here’s an example:

\def\idxargopen{`\<}
\def\idxargclose{`\>}
\sidx <left brace "{@left brace \verbatim "{"|endverbatim>

In this example we’ve also dealt with the second problem—braces are MakeIndex’s grouping characters as well (by default), so we have escaped unmatched braces with ‘"’.

And the final note: if you need a subentry containing brackets (‘[’ and ‘]’), avoid the optional argument of \sidx and friends, and use instead MakeIndex’s subentry separator to create the subentry with the brackets in it:

\sidx{entry!subentry with a bracket [}

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4.12.1.4 Proofing index terms

As you are reading through a manuscript, it is helpful to see what terms have been indexed, so you can add others, catch miscellaneous errors, etc. (Speaking from bitter experience, I can say it is extremely error-prone to leave all indexing to the end of the writing, since it involves adding many TeX commands to the source files.)

So Eplain puts index terms in the margin of each page, if you set \indexproofingtrue. It is false by default. The terms are typeset by the macro \indexproofterm, which takes a single argument, the term to be typeset. Eplain’s definition of \indexproofterm just puts it into an \hbox, first doing \indexprooffont, which Eplain defines to select the font cmtt8. With this definition long terms run off the page, but since this is just for proofreading anyway, it seems acceptable.

On the other hand, we certainly don’t want the index term to run into the text of the page, so Eplain uses the right-hand side of the page rather than the left-hand page (assuming a language read left to right here). So \ifodd\pageno, Eplain kerns by \outsidemargin, otherwise by \insidemargin. If those macros are undefined, \indexsetmargins defines them to be one inch plus \hoffset.

To get the proofing index entries on the proper page, Eplain defines a new insertion class \@indexproof. To unbox any index proofing material, Eplain redefines \makeheadline to call \indexproofunbox before the original \makeheadline. Thus, if you have your own output routine, that redefines or doesn’t use \makeheadline, it’s up to you to call \indexproofunbox at the appropriate time.


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4.12.2 Typesetting an index

The command \readindexfile{i} reads and typesets the .ind file that MakeIndex outputs (from the .idx file which the indexing commands in the previous sections write). Eplain defines a number of commands that support the default MakeIndex output.

More precisely, \readindexfile reads \indexfilebasename.index-letternd, where the index-letter is the argument. \indexfilebasename is \jobname by default, but if you have different indexes in different parts of a book, you may wish to change it, just as with bibliographies (see Citations).

MakeIndex was designed to work with LaTeX; therefore, by default the .ind file starts with \begin{theindex} and ends with \end{theindex}. If no \begin has been defined, Eplain defines one to ignore its argument and set up for typesetting the index (see below), and also defines a \end to ignore its argument. (In a group, naturally, since there is a primitive \end).

Eplain calls \indexfonts, sets \parindent = 0pt, and does \doublecolumns (see Multiple columns) at the \begin{theindex}. \indexfonts does nothing by default; it’s just there for you to override. (Indexes are usually typeset in smaller type than the main text.)

It ends the setup with \hookrun{beginindex}, so you can override anything you like in that hook (see Hooks). For example:

\hookaction{beginindex}{\triplecolumns}

MakeIndex turns each main index entry into an \item, subentries into \subitem, and subsubentries into \subsubitem. By default, the first line of main entries are not indented, and subentries are indented 1em per level. Main entries are preceded by a \vskip of \aboveitemskipamount, 0pt plus2pt by default. Page breaks are encouraged before main entries (\penalty -100), but prohibited afterwards—Eplain has no provision for “continued” index entries.

All levels do the following:

\hangindent = 1em
\raggedright
\hyphenpenalty = 10000

Each entry ends with \hookrun{indexitem}, so you can change any of this. For example, to increase the allowable rag:

\hookaction{indexitem}{\advance\rightskip by 2em}

Finally, MakeIndex outputs \indexspace between each group of entries in the .ind file. Eplain makes this equivalent to \bigbreak.


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4.12.3 Customizing indexing

By default, MakeIndex outputs ‘, ’ after each term in the index. To change this, you can add the following to your MakeIndex style (.ist) file:

delim_0 "\\afterindexterm "
delim_1 "\\afterindexterm "
delim_2 "\\afterindexterm "

Eplain makes \afterindexterm equivalent to \quad.

You can also change the keywords Eplain recognizes (see Modifying index entries):

\idxrangebeginword

‘begin’

\idxrangeendword

‘end’

\idxseecmdword

‘see’

\idxseealsocmdword

‘seealso’

You can also change the magic characters Eplain puts into the .idx file, in case you’ve changed them in the .ist file:

\idxsubentryseparator

!

\idxencapoperator

|

\idxbeginrangemark

(

\idxendrangemark

)

There is no macro for the actual (‘@’ by default) character, because it’s impossible to make it expand properly.

You can change the (imaginary) page number that “see also” entries sort as by redefining \idxmaxpagenum. This is 99999 by default, which is one digit too many for old versions of MakeIndex.

The words output by Eplain for “see” and “see also” index entries are defined by \indexseeword and \indexseealsowords respectively. You can change the typeface used for these words by redefining \seevariant. And finally, the macros \indexsee and \indexseealso actually produce the “see …” entries, so you can redefine them if you want something entirely different. If you do redefine them, make them take two parameters, the term being referenced and the \idxmaxpagenum (the latter should normally be ignored). See the example below.

Unfortunately, it is impossible to reliably control the commas produced by MakeIndex in front of “see …” entries in the .ind file, either at MakeIndex level or at Eplain level. However, the sed script contained in trimsee distributed with Eplain in the util directory can be used to filter out these commas from the output of MakeIndex. For example, suppose you want the following style for your “see …” entries:

analysis,
  archetypal (see archetypal criticism)
archetypal criticism,
  elements of, 75, 97, 114 (see also dichotomies)

You would need to redefine these macros in your TeX file:

\def\indexsee#1#2{({\seevariant \indexseeword\/ }#1)}
\def\indexseealso#1#2{({\seevariant \indexseealsowords\/ }#1)}

and then filter out the commas in front of the “see …” entries by running the following command to produce the .ind file (assuming the name of the .idx file is myfile.idx and the trimsee script is placed in the current directory):

prompt$ cat myfile.idx | makeindex | ./trimsee > myfile.ind

By default, trimsee uses default page list separators and default “see …” command names. If you set up MakeIndex to use different page list separator or change the names of \indexsee and \indexseealso commands, it is possible to adjust the trimsee script through its command line options, which are the following:

-i is

Use is as a regular expression matching separator before “see …” commands in the input (default: ‘, \+’).

-o os

Use os as a separator to replace is before “see …” commands (default: ‘ ’).

-s see

Use see as a regular expression matching “see …” commands (default: ‘\\indexsee’).

-h
--help

Print a usage message.

-v
--version

Print version.

trimsee reads input from the standard input, and directs its output to the standard output.


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4.13 Justification

Eplain defines three commands to conveniently justify multiple lines of text: \flushright, \flushleft, and \center.

They all work in the same way; let’s take \center as the example. To start centering lines, you say \center inside a group; to stop, you end the group. Between the two commands, each end-of-line in the input file also starts a new line in the output file.

The entire block of text is broken into paragraphs at blank lines, so all the TeX paragraph-shaping parameters apply in the usual way. This is convenient, but it implies something else that isn’t so convenient: changes to any linespacing parameters, such as \baselineskip, will have no effect on the paragraph in which they are changed. TeX does not handle linespacing changes within a paragraph (because it doesn’t know where the line breaks are until the end of the paragraph).

The space between paragraphs is by default one blank line’s worth. You can adjust this space by assigning to \blanklineskipamount; this (vertical) glue is inserted after each blank line.

Here is an example:

{\center First line.

   Second line, with a blank line before.
}

This produces:

First line.
Second line, with a blank line before.

You may wish to use the justification macros inside of your own macros. Just be sure to put them in a group. For example, here is how a title macro might be defined:

\def\title{\begingroup\titlefont\center}
\def\endtitle{\endgroup}

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4.14 Tables

Eplain provides a single command, \makecolumns, to make generating one particular kind of table easier. More ambitious LaTeX styles and macro packages tackle more difficult applications. The autorows feature of the Memoir package provides similar functionality to this.

Many tables are homogenous, i.e., all the entries are semantically the same. The arrangement into columns is to save space on the page, not to encode different meanings. In this kind of the table, it is useful to have the column breaks chosen automatically, so that you can add or delete entries without worrying about the column breaks.

\makecolumns takes two arguments: the number of entries in the table, and the number of columns to break them into. As you can see from the example below, the first argument is delimited by a slash, and the second by a colon and a space (or end-of-line). The entries for the table then follow, one per line (not including the line with the \makecolumns command itself).

\parindent defines the space to the left of the table. \hsize defines the width of the table. So you can adjust the position of the table on the page by assignments to these parameters, probably inside a group.

You can also control the penalty at a page break before the \makecolumns by setting the parameter \abovecolumnspenalty. Usually, the table is preceded by some explanatory text. You wouldn’t want a page break to occur after the text and before the table, so Eplain sets it to 10000. But if the table produced by \makecolumns is standing on its own, \abovecolumnspenalty should be decreased.

If you happen to give \makecolumns a smaller number of entries than you really have, some text beyond the (intended) end of the table will be incorporated into the table, probably producing an error message, or at least some strange looking entries. And if you give \makecolumns a larger number of entries than you really have, some of the entries will be typeset as straight text, probably also looking somewhat out of place.

Here is an example:

% Arrange 6 entries into 2 columns:
\makecolumns 6/2: % This line doesn't have an entry.
one
two
three
four
five
six
Text after the table.

This produces ‘one’, ‘two’, and ‘three’ in the first column, and ‘four’, ‘five’, and ‘six’ in the second.


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4.15 Margins

TeX’s primitives describe the type area in terms of an offset from the upper left corner, and the width and height of the type. Some people prefer to think in terms of the margins at the top, bottom, left, and right of the page, and most composition systems other than TeX conceive of the page laid out in this way. Therefore, Eplain provides commands to directly assign and increment the margins.

\topmargin = dimen
\bottommargin = dimen
\leftmargin = dimen
\rightmargin = dimen

These commands set the specified margin to the dimen given. The = and the spaces around it are optional. The control sequences here are not TeX registers, despite appearances; therefore, commands like \showthe\topmargin will not do what you expect.

\advancetopmargin by dimen
\advancebottommargin by dimen
\advanceleftmargin by dimen
\advancerightmargin by dimen

These commands change the specified margin by the dimen given.

Regardless of whether you use the assignment or the advance commands, Eplain always changes the type area in response, not the other margins. For example, when TeX starts, the left and right margins are both one inch. If you then say \leftmargin = 2in, the right margin will remain at one inch, and the width of the lines (i.e., \hsize) will decrease by one inch.

When you use any of these commands, Eplain computes the old value of the particular margin, by how much you want to change it, and then resets the values of TeX’s primitive parameters to correspond. Unfortunately, Eplain cannot compute the right or bottom margin without help: you must tell it the full width and height of the final output page. It defines two new parameters for this:

\paperheight

The height of the output page; default is 11truein.

\paperwidth

The width of the output page; default is 8.5truein.

If your output page has different dimensions than this, you must reassign to these parameters, as in

\paperheight = 11truein
\paperwidth = 17truein

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4.16 Multiple columns

Eplain provides for double, triple, and quadruple column output: say \doublecolumns, \triplecolumns, or \quadcolumns, and from that point on, the manuscript will be set in columns. To go back to one column, say \singlecolumn.

You may need to invoke \singlecolumn to balance the columns on the last page of output.

To do a “column eject”, i.e., move to the top of the next column, do \columnfill. This does not actually force an eject, however: it merely inserts an unbreakable space of (essentially) size \@normalvsize minus \pagetotal (where \@normalvsize is the usual height of the page; to implement multicolumns, Eplain multiplies \vsize itself by the number of columns). In most circumstances, a column break will be forced after this space (during the column splitting operation when the whole page is output). Bugs are easily possible, unfortunately.

The columns are separated by the value of the dimen parameter \gutter. Default value is two picas. If you want to add vertical material between the columns, use \gutterbox. For example, to put a vertical line between columns, define \gutterbox as

\def\gutterbox{\vbox to \dimen0{\vfil\hbox{\vrule height\dimen0}\vfil}}%

The dimension counter \dimen0 contains the height of the column.

All the \…columns macros insert the value of the glue parameter \abovecolumnskip before the multicolumn text, and the value of the glue parameter \belowcolumnskip after it. The default value for both of these parameters is \bigskipamount, i.e., one linespace in plain TeX.

The macros take into account only the insertion classes defined by plain TeX; namely, footnotes and \topinserts. If you have additional insertion classes, you will need to change the implementation.

Also, Eplain makes insertions the full page width. There is no provision for column-width insertions.


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4.17 Footnotes

The most common reference mark for footnotes is a raised number, incremented on each footnote. The \numberedfootnote macro provides this. It takes one argument, the footnote text.

If your document uses only numbered footnotes, you could make typing \numberedfootnote more convenient with a command such as:

\let\footnote = \numberedfootnote

After doing this, you can type your footnotes as \footnote{footnote text}, instead of as \numberedfootnote{footnote text}.

Eplain keeps the current footnote number in the count register \footnotenumber. So, to reset the footnote number to zero, as you might want to do at, for example, the beginning of a chapter, you could say \footnotenumber=0.

Plain TeX separates the footnote marker from the footnote text by an en space (it uses the \textindent macro). In Eplain, you can change this space by setting the dimension register \footnotemarkseparation. The default is still an en.

You can produce a space between footenotes by setting the glue register \interfootnoteskip. The default is zero.

\parskip is also set to zero by default before the beginning of each footnote (but not for the text of the footnote).

You can also control footnote formatting in a more general way: Eplain expands the token register \everyfootnote before a footnote is typeset, but after the default values for all the parameters have been established. For example, if you want your footnotes to be printed in seven-point type, indented by one inch, you could say:

\everyfootnote = {\sevenrm \leftskip = 1in}

By default, an \hrule is typeset above each group of footnotes on a page. You can control the dimensions of this rule by setting the dimension registers \footnoterulewidth and \footnoteruleheight. The space between the rule and the first footnote on the page is determined by the dimension register \belowfootnoterulespace. If you don’t want any rule at all, set \footenoteruleheight=0pt, and, most likely, \belowfootnoterulespace=0pt. The defaults for these parameters typeset the rule in the same way as plain TeX: the rule is 0.4 points high, 2 true inches wide, with 2.6 points below it.

The space above the rule and below the text on the page is controlled by the glue register \skip\footins. The default is a plain TeX \bigskip.

Eplain can create hypertext links for the footnote marks (see Footnote hyperlinks).


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4.18 Fractions

Exercise 11.6 of The TeXbook describes a macro \frac for setting fractions, but \frac never made it into plain TeX. So Eplain includes it.

\frac typesets the numerator and denominator in \scriptfont0, slightly raised and lowered. The numerator and denominator are separated by a slash. The denominator must be enclosed in braces if it’s more than one token long, but the numerator need not be. (This is a consequence of \frac taking delimited arguments; see page 203 of The TeXbook for an explanation of delimited macro arguments.)

For example, \frac 23/{64} turns ‘23/64’ into .


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4.19 Paths

When you typeset long pathnames, electronic mail addresses, or other such “computer” names, you would like TeX to break lines at punctuation characters within the name, rather than trying to find hyphenation points within the words. For example, it would be better to break the email address letters@alpha.gnu.ai.mit.edu at the ‘@’ or a ‘.’, rather than at the hyphenation points in ‘letters’ and ‘alpha’.

If you use the \path macro to typeset the names, TeX will find these good breakpoints. The argument to \path is delimited by any character other other than ‘\’ which does not appear in the name itself. ‘|’ is often a good choice, as in:

\path|letters@alpha.gnu.ai.mit.edu|

You can control the exact set of characters at which breakpoints will be allowed by calling \discretionaries. This takes the same sort of delimited argument; any character in the argument will henceforth be a valid breakpoint within \path. The default set is essentially all the punctuation characters:

\discretionaries |~!@$%^&*()_+`-=#{}[]:";'<>,.?\/|

If for some reason you absolutely must use \ as the delimiter character for \path, you can set \specialpathdelimiterstrue. (Other delimiter characters can still be used.) TeX then processes the \path argument about four times more slowly.

The \path macro comes from path.sty, written by Nelson Beebe and Philip Taylor and available at http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/misc/path.sty.


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4.20 Logos

Eplain redefines the \TeX macro of plain TeX to end with \null, so that the proper spacing is produced when \TeX is used at the end of a sentence. The other …TeX macros listed here do this, also.

Eplain defines \AMSLaTeX, \AMSTeX, \BibTeX \eTeX, \ExTeX, \LAMSTeX, \LaTeX, \MF, \SLiTeX, \XeLaTeX, and \XeTeX to produce their respective logos. (Sorry, the logos are not shown here.) Some spelling variants of these are also supported.

Most of these macros come from texnames.sty, compiled by Nelson Beebe and available at http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/info/biblio/texnames.sty.


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4.21 Boxes

The solid rectangle that Eplain uses as a marker in unordered lists (see Lists) is available by itself: just say \blackbox.

You can create black boxes of arbitrary size with \hrule or \vrule.

You can also get unfilled rectangles with \makeblankbox. This takes two explicit arguments: the height and depth of the rules that define the top and bottom of the rectangle. (The two arguments are added to get the width of the left and right borders, so that the thickness of the border is the same on all four sides.) It also uses, as implicit arguments, the dimensions of \box0 to define the dimensions of the rectangle it produces. (The contents of \box0 are ignored.)

Here is an example. This small raised open box is suitable for putting next to numbers in, e.g., a table of contents.

\def\openbox{%
  \ht0 = 1.75pt \dp0 = 1.75pt \wd0 = 3.5pt
  \raise 2.75pt \makeblankbox{.2pt}{.2pt}
}

Finally, you can put a box around arbitrary text with \boxit. This takes one argument, which must itself be a (TeX) box, and puts a printed box around it, separated by \boxitspace white space (3 points by default) on all four sides. For example:

\boxit{\hbox{This text is boxed.}}

The reason that the argument must be a box is that when the text is more than one line long, TeX cannot figure out the line length for itself. Eplain does set \parindent to zero inside \boxit, since it is very unlikely you would want indentation there. (If you do, you can always reset it yourself.)

\boxit uses \ehrule and \evrule so that you can easily adjust the thicknesses of the box rules. See Rules.


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4.22 Checking for PDF output

pdfTeX is a TeX variant that can output both .dvi and .pdf (Adobe’s Portable Document Format) files (see http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/systems/pdftex). You might sometimes want to know whether the target format is .pdf or .dvi. The \ifpdf switch can be used to detect pdfTeX in PDF mode:

\ifpdf
   This text is produced when pdfTeX is in PDF mode.
\else
   This text is produced when pdfTeX is in DVI mode,
   or when some program other than pdfTeX is used.
\fi

Keep in mind that \ifpdf is set based on the value of the \pdfoutput primitive of pdfTeX at the time Eplain is loaded. If you change the value of \pdfoutput after you load Eplain, \ifpdf will not reflect the change.

Eplain defines \ifpdf by incorporating Heiko Oberdiek’s ifpdf.sty, which is available at http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/oberdiek/ifpdf.sty.


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4.23 Loading LaTeX packages

Eplain provides a limited support for loading LaTeX packages (.sty files—not .cls). This will mostly work for packages which were designed with plain TeX compatibility in mind, which means that most LaTeX packages cannot be loaded. The packages which are known to work are listed below (see Packages known to work). If you discover a working package which is not in the list, please report it to the Eplain mailing list (see Introduction).

To set up a pseudo-LaTeX environment for the packages, Eplain uses miniltx.tex (http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/plain/graphics/miniltx.tex) from the LaTeX graphics collection, written by David Carlisle and Sebastian Rahtz (the collection is available at http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/required/graphics). Eplain extends miniltx.tex to provide some additional features, e.g., support for package options.


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4.23.1 The \usepackage command

\usepackage loads a LaTeX package. Its syntax is similar to that of LaTeX’s \usepackage command:

\usepackage[options]{packages}[version]

where options is a comma-separated list of package options, packages is a comma-separated list of packages to load (without the .sty suffix), and version is a package version number given as a date in the format ‘YYYY/MM/DD’. If an older version of the package is found, a warning is issued. If several packages are loaded within a single \usepackage command, the options will be applied to each of the packages. As usual, parameters in square brackets are optional and can be omitted (together with the square brackets).

For example:

\usepackage[foo,bar]{pack1,pack2}[2005/08/29]

will load packages ‘pack1’ and ‘pack2’, each with the options ‘foo’ and ‘bar’, and will check that each of the packages are dated 2005/08/29 or newer.


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4.23.2 Environment for loading packages

Some packages request that certain commands are executed after all packages have been loaded. In LaTeX, this means that the commands are executed at the beginning of the document, after the so-called preamble. Neither plain TeX nor Eplain have a concept of preamble; therefore, Eplain requires that all packages be loaded inside a \beginpackages...\endpackages block. For example:

\beginpackages
  \usepackage[foo,bar]{pack1}
  \usepackage{pack2}
\endpackages

This requirement enables Eplain to execute the “delayed” commands at the end of the \beginpackages...\endpackages block.

For the same reason, it is advisable to specify only one such block per document, just like there is only one preamble in LaTeX.

Both the miniltx.tex file used by Eplain and some LaTeX packages redefine TeX’s primitive \input to be a macro. Under plain TeX, users probably expect the primitive \input. Therefore, at the beginning of the \beginpackages...\endpackages block Eplain saves the meaning of \input as \eplaininput and restores the original \input at the end of the block. This usually means that the primitive \input is restored, unless you (or some other macro package you’ve loaded directly) have redefined it before calling \beginpackages. In case you need to access the package-provided \input, Eplain saves it as \packageinput.

Along the same lines, Eplain restores the catcode of ‘@’ at \endpackages to whatever it was before (using \resetatcatcode, as defined by miniltx.tex). This is needed because miniltx.tex, read by \beginpackages, does not restore the catcode of ‘@’, but leaves it as 11 (letter).

Sometimes you may encounter packages which make conflicting redefinitions of \input. Common symptoms are TeX spewing incomprehensible error messages or hanging in a loop at a call to \input. This sometimes cna be cured by restoring \input to \eplaininput before loading each package. For example:

\beginpackages
  \usepackage{pack1}
  \let\input\eplaininput
  \usepackage{pack2}
\endpackages

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4.23.3 Packages known to work

The following table lists packages that had been tested and are known to work with Eplain, and locations where you can find manuals for these packages. Some of the short descriptions of the packages were taken from the documentation for those packages.

autopict (‘2001/06/04 v1.1j Picture mode autoload file’)

http://tug.org/eplain/misc/ltpictur.pdf

This is the LaTeX “picture mode”, started by \begin{picture} and ended by \end{picture} (in LaTeX, this package is not explicitly loaded since it is part of the LaTeX kernel). It provides commands to draw simple figures inside your document without resorting to any external tools.

color (‘1999/02/16 v1.0i Standard LaTeX Color (DPC)’)
graphics (‘2001/07/07 v1.0n Standard LaTeX Graphics (DPC,SPQR)’)
graphicx (‘1999/02/16 v1.0f Enhanced LaTeX Graphics (DPC,SPQR)’)

http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/required/graphics/grfguide.pdf

These packages are from the LaTeX graphics collection. They provide commands for changing text/page colors, text rotation and scaling, and much more.

Warning 1: If you encounter problems loading one of these packages under pdfTeX (more specifically, when pdfTeX reads supp-mis.tex), the cause may be an outdated supp-mis.tex (part of ConTeXt, a typesetting system for TeX) installed on your system. The problem was fixed in supp-mis.tex version 2004.10.26. You can obtain up-to-date versions of supp-mis.tex and the accompanying supp-pdf.tex from http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/pdftex/graphics. To convince TeX to use the new files, you have the following options in the decreasing order of preference:

  1. put the new files in the same directory with your document;
  2. overwrite the outdated files installed by your TeX distribution;
  3. install the new supp-mis.tex and supp-pdf.tex files in the relevant subdirectory of your local texmf tree (for info on TeX directory structure see http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html?label=tds);
  4. upgrade your ConTeXt installation.

Note that option 1 is the safest but provides the fix only for your current document. Options 2 and 3 will usually suffice for Eplain but may break ConTeXt. Option 4 is the most general but is more complicated than the first three. Be sure to backup any files you overwrite. Also keep in mind that upgrading your TeX distribution may overwrite files you install in the system texmf tree.
End of warning 1.

Warning 2: If you encounter problems using the \pagecolor command from the color.sty package under pdfTeX, the cause may be an outdated pdfTeX color and graphics driver pdftex.def. The problem was fixed in pdftex.def version 0.03p. You can obtain an up-to-date version from http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/graphics/pdftex/pdftex.def.
End of warning 2.

The graphics/graphicx packages have the option draft which instructs \includegraphics not to include the graphics but instead typeset a box with the dimensions of the graphics and the name of the graphics file in typewriter type at the center of the box. These packages expect the LaTeX-provided command \ttfamily to switch to the typewrite type. This command is not defined by miniltx.tex, therefore Eplain defines it and makes it equivalent to plain TeX’s \tt.

See Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex), for the demonstration of text rotation and graphics inclusion using the graphicx package, and using the color package to colorize hypertext links.

Klaus Höppner has written a nice introduction to the LaTeX graphics packages and different graphics formats. You can download it from

epstopdf (‘2009/07/16 v2.2 Conversion with epstopdf on the fly (HO)’)

http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/oberdiek

This package does on-the-fly conversion of Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) graphics into Portable Document Format (PDF) graphics for inclusion with the \includegraphics command from the graphics/graphicx packages, so that you do not have to explicitly call the epstopdf script.

psfrag (‘1998/04/11 v3.04 PSfrag (MCG)’)

http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/psfrag/pfgguide.pdf

PSfrag allows the user to precisely overlay Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) files with arbitrary (La)TeX constructions. In order to accomplish this, the user places a simple text “tag” in the graphics file, as a “position marker” of sorts. Then, using simple (La)TeX commands, the user instructs PSfrag to remove that tag from the figure, and replace it with a properly sized, aligned, and rotated (La)TeX equation.

soul (‘2003/11/17 v2.4 letterspacing/underlining (mf)’)

http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/soul

This package provides hyphenatable letterspacing (spacing out), underlining, and some derivatives. The package is optimized for LaTeX, but works with plain TeX—you don’t actually need to load it with the \usepackage command, just say \input soul.sty. If you intend to use the highlighting macros of soul, don’t forget to load the color package.

url (‘2005/06/27 ver 3.2 Verb mode for urls, etc.’)

http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/misc/url.sty

This package provides a form of \verbatim that allows line breaks at certain characters or combinations of characters, accepts reconfiguration, and can usually be used in the argument to another command. It is intended for email addresses, hypertext links, directories/paths, etc., which normally have no spaces.

Eplain can create hypertext links with the \url command (see URL hyperlinks).

Be sure to get a version dated at least 2005/06/27, as older versions have problems in plain TeX.


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4.23.4 Packages known not to work

The following packages are known not to work with Eplain:

hyperref

http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/hyperref

This package depends heavily on LaTeX, so that it is mostly unusable outside of LaTeX. Eplain provides its own macros for creating hyperlinks, see Hyperlinks.

pict2e (‘2005/07/15 v0.2r Improved picture commands (HjG,RN)’)

http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/pict2e

xcolor (‘2005/06/06 v2.03 LaTeX color extensions (UK)’)

http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/xcolor


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5 Hyperlinks

This chapter describes the support which Eplain provides for hypertext links (hyperlinks for short). Hyperlinks can be created implicitly by the cross-reference, indexing and other macros in Eplain. Macros for constructing explicit hyperlinks are also provided.


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5.1 Introduction to hyperlinks

The original TeX engine has no built-in support for hyperlinks (a.k.a. hypertext links). Many of the present-day file formats with hyperlinking capabilities did not even exist at the time TeX was written. However, TeX’s \special primitive can be used to instruct TeX to write special directives into its .dvi output file. These directives are not interpreted by TeX in any way; they are intended for programs which process the .dvi files produced by TeX, be it printing or converting to other formats, such as .ps or .pdf.

Another approach is to extend the original TeX engine with the ability to generate one of the hyperlinking formats; TeX’s set of primitives can be extended to include hyperlink commands. This is the approach used by the pdfTeX engine, which is capable of producing .pdf files directly from the TeX source, skipping the .dvi generation and processing step.

It turns out that the sets of commands for different formats are mostly not interchangeable, as each of the file formats has its own quirks and capabilities. And this is where Eplain hyperlink drivers come into play.

In order for Eplain to generate proper commands, Eplain has to know two things: which engine or .dvi processor you are using, and the set of commands it understands.

The knowledge about the commands that the various processors understand is programmed into Eplain’s hyperlink drivers. Eplain provides three drivers: hypertex (implementation of the HyperTeX standard, see http://arxiv.org/hypertex), and pdftex and dvipdfm (named after the programs which process the hyperlink commands, pdfTeX and dvipdfm). Therefore, Eplain can only produce HyperTeX commands and hyperlink commands for one of these two programs—except that the extended dvipdfmx program can be used as well as the original dvipdfm, since they are compatible.

To tell Eplain which .dvi processor or extended TeX engine you are using, use the command \enablehyperlinks.

For example:

\enablehyperlinks

instructs Eplain to attempt to automatically detect which driver to use, as follows: if it detects pdfTeX in PDF mode, it loads the pdftex driver. If it does not detect pdfTeX in PDF mode, the hypertex driver is loaded. The detection is based on the \ifpdf switch (see Checking for PDF output).

If necessary, you can explicitly specify the driver name:

\enablehyperlinks[pdftex]

will start producing hyperlinks under the assumption that you are using pdfTeX.

Eplain does not produce any hyperlinks until you explicitly enable them with \enablehyperlinks. For one thing, this keeps Eplain backward-compatible with previous releases without hyperlink support. For another, you may be using a program other than pdfTeX or dvipdfm, which does not understand their hyperlink commands or the HyperTeX commands.

Concepts and Terminology

In general, hyperlinks work as follows. You mark some place in your document as a hyperlink destination, associating a hyperlink label with that destination. Next, somewhere within your document, you create a hyperlink, using a label to identify the destination you want this link to point to. A hyperlink is a region in the document (which can take many forms, for example, text or a picture); when a user clicks on that region, they will be taken to a place in the document marked by the corresponding destination. The following two sections (Explicit hyperlinks, and Implicit hyperlinks) describe the macros you can use to define destinations and create links pointing to those destinations.

In the rest of this chapter, we will often need to refer to links and destinations jointly, in which case we will use the term hyperlinks. We will use the terms links and destinations in cases when we need to refer specifically to links or destinations.

Hyperlink drivers provide several kinds of links and destinations. We will refer to them as link types and destination types.

For example, one of the destination types that the pdftex driver provides is the ‘xyz’ type; when the user follows a link pointing to an ‘xyz’ destination, the exact location marked by that destination is displayed. Another destination type provided by the pdftex driver is the ‘fit’ type; when the user follows a link pointing to a ‘fit’ destination, the page containing that destination is zoomed to fit into the window in which the document is displayed.

Similarly, drivers support various link types. For example, with the pdftex driver, the usual link type used to refer to destinations in the current document is called ‘name’. You can also create a link pointing to another local document (by using the ‘filename’ link type) or to a URL (by using the ‘url’ link type).

In addition, each hyperlink driver supports a number of destination and link options. By setting these options you can customize hyperlink parameters (e.g., the thickness of the border drawn around a hyperlink) or pass information to hyperlinks (for example, file name of a document, for a link pointing to a destination in another document).

See Hyperlink drivers, for the description of hyperlink types and options supported by the drivers. See Setting hyperlink types and options, for the information on how to set hyperlink options.


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5.2 Explicit hyperlinks

Explicit hyperlinks are created by you, in the source of your document. The simplest command is \hldest, which marks the current position in your document as a destination:

\hldest{type}{options}{label}

Here type is one of the destination types supported by the hyperlink driver (see Hyperlink drivers), options is a comma-separated list of option assignments, and label is the hyperlink label to associate with this destination. This label will identify the destination when creating links pointing to this destination. For example, with the pdftex driver, the command

\hldest{xyz}{zoom=2000}{index}

creates a destination of type ‘xyz’ (“the current position”), sets the magnification ratio for this destination to be 200%, and associates the label index with the destination.

Another command, \hlstart, paired with \hlend, turns all intervening material into a link:

\hlstart{type}{options}{label} … \hlend

Here type, options and label have the same meaning as for \hldest. Continuing the previous example,

\hlstart{name}{bstyle=U,bwidth=2}{index} Index\hlend

typesets the word ‘Index’ as a link with underline border of width 2 PostScript points, pointing to the named destination index defined in the previous example. (The other options, like highlight mode and border color, are determined by the defaults, see Setting default types and options).

The label argument of both \hldest and \hlstart can contain special characters (such as ‘#’, ‘%’, ‘&’, ‘~’, etc.) without any escaping. This is especially important for URL links supported by some drivers (see Hyperlink drivers).

Both \hldest and \hlstart ignore following spaces.

Both \hldest and \hlstart expand the first token of options once, so you can save a list of options in a macro and pass it for the options. For example:

\def\linkopts{bstyle=U,bwidth=2}
\hlstart{name}{\linkopts}{index}Index\hlend

is functionally equivalent to the previous example.

See Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex), for a demonstration of the usage of explicit hyperlinks.


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5.3 Implicit hyperlinks

Implicit hyperlinks are hyperlinks created implicitly by various Eplain macros, such as the macros for citations, cross-references, indexing, etc.

All such macros are divided into link groups and destination groups (or linkgroups and destgroups for short) so that parameters can be set individually for each group. For example, all equation macros which define a destination are assigned to the ‘eq’ destgroup; equation macros which create a link are assigned to the ‘eq’ linkgroup. By setting parameters for the ‘eq’ linkgroup (destgroup), you can uniformly customize all links (destinations) related to equation references, without interfering with settings for the other groups.

See Setting hyperlink types and options, for information on how to set parameters for a group.

Here is the list of the linkgroups:

hrefint, hrefext, url, cite, ref, xref, eq, idx, foot, footback.

And here are the destgroups:

bib, li, definexref, xrdef, eq, idx, foot, footback.

See Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex), for a demonstration of the usage of implicit hyperlinks.

The following subsections describe each of the linkgroups and destgroups and the hyperlink support provided.


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5.3.1 General hyperlinks: hrefint, hrefext

\href{url}{text} typesets text as a link to url. It basically does what the explicit hyperlink macros do (see Explicit hyperlinks), but is more convenient (at the expense of flexibility).

If url starts with ‘#’, the rest of url is assumed to be a local hyperlink destination name (destination within the same document). Parameters for these links can be set by customizing the ‘hrefint’ linkgroup. For example:

See \href{#intro}{Introduction}

will make ‘Introduction’ into an internal link, which might have been created, e.g., with \xrdef{intro}.

If url does not start with ‘#’, it is assumed to be a URL link. Parameters for these links can be set by customizing the ‘hrefext’ linkgroup. The special characters (such as ‘#’ and ‘~’) in the URL don’t need to be escaped. For example:

\href{http://tug.org/eplain/doc/eplain.html#Hyperlinks}{Hyperlinks
  in Eplain}
\href{mailto:tex-eplain@tug.org}{Eplain mailing list}

See URL hyperlinks, for another way to create URL hyperlinks.

The text argument of \href can contain verbatim text (see Verbatim listing) or other macros which manipulate character catcodes. For example:

\href{#WeirdChars}{The weird chars \verbatim #&%$~|endverbatim}

\href does not currently handle other link types, such as file:’ and run:’ links.


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5.3.2 URL hyperlinks: url

The ‘url’ linkgroup covers the \url command from the LaTeX package url (see Packages known to work), as well as any new \url-like commands you define. The type for this linkgroup is set to ‘url’ by the drivers which support this link type. ‘url’ links use the parameter to the \url command as the URL to point to.

You may be using the \url command to typeset something other than a URL, e.g., a path, for which you do not want a link to be created; in that case, you can disable the ‘url’ linkgroup with the command \hloff[url] (see Turning hyperlinks on/off for a group).

By default, URL (and other types of) links are boxed, so that they are visually marked even if you do not load the LaTeX ‘color’ package (see Loading LaTeX packages) and therefore link text is not colored. You can see the effect by compiling the following code snippet (be sure to get a modern url.sty, older versions do not work in plain TeX; see Packages known to work):

\input eplain
\beginpackages
  \usepackage{url}
\endpackages

\enablehyperlinks

\url{http://foo/bar}

\url{mailto:foobar@example.org}

\bye

If the hyperlink driver you use supports the link option bwidth (see Hyperlink drivers), you can produce colored links with no border around them. Try this:

\input eplain
\beginpackages
  \usepackage{url}
  \usepackage{color}
\endpackages

\enablehyperlinks
\hlopts{bwidth=0}

\url{http://foo/bar}

\url{mailto:foobar@example.org}

\bye

The command \hlopts{bwidth=0} sets border width to zero as the default for all links, and loading the color package automatically colors links using the default color (see Options supported by all drivers). If you want the border width setting to apply to URL links only, say \hlopts[url]{bwidth=0} (see Setting hyperlink types and options).


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5.3.3 Citation hyperlinks: cite, bib

The ‘cite’ linkgroup includes only the \cite command (see Citations). \cite turns each of the references in the list into a link pointing to the respective bibliography entry produced by the \bibliography command.

The ‘bib’ destgroup includes the macros related to the \bibliography command (see Citations). \bibliography inputs a .bbl file, which contains a list of bibliography entries. For each of the entries, a destination is defined.

Both commands use the citation label as the hyperlink label.


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5.3.4 List hyperlinks: li

The ‘li’ destgroup consists of the \li command (see Lists), which defines a destination if you supply the optional argument (cross-reference label). This label is also used as the hyperlink label.


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5.3.5 Cross-reference hyperlinks: definexref, ref

The ‘definexref’ destgroup is for the \definexref command (see Defining generic references). \definexref defines a destination using the cross-reference label (the first argument) as the hyperlink label.

The ‘ref’ linkgroup includes \refn and \xrefn (they are synonyms), \ref, and \refs (see Using generic references).

\refn turns the cross-reference it produces into a link, using the cross-reference label as the hyperlink label. If an optional argument is present, it is tied by \reftie to the reference and become part of the link.

\ref works similarly to \refn. It takes an optional argument, which is treated the same way as the optional argument to \refn. In addition, \ref can produce a “class word”. Both the optional argument and the class word become part of the link, when present. The cross-reference is tied by \reftie to the preceding word. The optional argument is separated from the class word by \refspace.

Unlike \ref, \refs does not take an optional argument and does not make the class word part of the link, which is appropriate for its intended use.


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5.3.6 Page reference hyperlinks: xrdef, xref

The ‘xrdef’ destgroup is for \xrdef (see Page references). \xrdef defines a destination using cross-reference label as the hyperlink label.

The ‘xref’ linkgroup includes the \xref command (see Page references). \xref turns its optional argument (followed by \refspace), \xrefpageword and the cross-reference (page number) into a link, using the cross-reference label as the hyperlink label.


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5.3.7 Equation reference hyperlinks: eq

All commands that define equation labels are part of the ‘eq’ destgroup. These are \eqdef, \eqdefn, \eqsubdef and \eqsubdefn (see Equation references). All these commands use the equation label as the hyperlink label. However, if the equation label is empty, they make up a (hopefully) unique hyperlink label for the destination. This label will be used for the link when you refer to this empty-labeled equation with one of the equation reference macros.

The command \phantomeqlabel is called to generate hyperlink labels for the empty-labeled equations. By default, it produces the labels in the format ‘PHEQnumber’, where number comes from the count register \phantomeqnumber; this count register is incremented at every empty-labeled equation definition.

The commands \eqref and \eqrefn (see Equation references) form the ‘eq’ linkgroup. These commands take an optional argument, which, when present, is tied with \reftie to the equation reference and becomes part of the link. The equation label is used for the hyperlink label; if the label is empty, the link is for the label generated for the last empty-labeled equation.


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5.3.8 Index hyperlinks: idx

All indexing commands (\idx, \idxname, \idxmarked, \idxsubmarked and their silent equivalents, see Indexing commands) form the ‘idx’ destgroup. The ‘idx’ linkgroup consists of the macros which are used to typeset the index when you say \readindexfile{index-letter} (see Typesetting an index).

To create the links in index entries, Eplain uses MakeIndex’s “encapsulation” feature. When you use an indexing macro to mark an index term, Eplain writes out a line to the .idx file of the following general form:

\indexentry{entry|pagemarkup}{pageno}

where entry is the index entry (converted into the internal format that MakeIndex understands), cs is the markup command you specified with the pagemarkup=cs optional argument to the indexing commands (see Modifying index entries), and pageno is the page number on which the term appeared. When processing the .idx file, MakeIndex makes the page number an argument to the page markup command (“encapsulates” the page number), so the page number in the .ind file appears as \cs{pageno}. Eplain internally replaces the cs command name with its own command, which, in addition to calling the original \cs encapsulator, turns the page number into a link.

Eplain provides two approaches to linking page numbers in the index to locations of index terms in the text.


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5.3.8.1 Exact destinations for index terms

In this approach, each command that marks an index term defines a unique destination and passes its label on to the .idx file as part of the \indexentry command. The \indexentry line that Eplain writes to the .idx file becomes

\indexentry{entry|hlidx{label}{cs}}{pageno}

where \hlidx is the command that is defined by Eplain to take three arguments: a hyperlink label (label), a name of page number encapsulator (cs) and a page number (pageno). In the .ind file that MakeIndex will generate, the page number will now appear as

\hlidx{label}{cs}{pageno}

The result of this command is \cs{pageno}, wrapped up into a link pointing to label destination.

The hyperlink labels for the index terms are generated by the \hlidxlabel command, by default in the format ‘IDXnumber’, where number is the value of the count register \hlidxlabelnumber. This count register is incremented at each index term.

The advantage of this approach, as compared to the second approach described below, is that links in the index point to exact locations of the indexed terms on the page. The disadvantage of this approach is that MakeIndex will regard all index entries as distinct, because each one contains a (unique) hyperlink label. This disadvantage can be partially overcome by the script idxuniq distributed with Eplain in the util directory. This script filters out \indexentry lines differing only in the hyperlink label but identical otherwise. You should process the .idx with this script before passing it on to MakeIndex. For example:

prompt$ ./idxuniq file.idx | makeindex > file.ind

Still, this solution is not ideal, as the page-range formation ability of MakeIndex will not work, and there will be problems of apparently identical index entries clashing (e.g., when a range-end entry appears on the same page as another entry with the same definition; idxuniq will not filter out the second entry).


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5.3.8.2 Page destinations for index terms

In the second approach, Eplain does not write out any destination labels for the index terms. Instead, Eplain writes out a wrapper for page number encapsulator which can parse the page number and generate a link pointing to the page on which the term appeared. On top of each page containing an index term, Eplain defines a destination with label produced by \hlidxpagelabel. The \hlidxpagelabel command takes a single argument (page number number) and by default produces the label in the format ‘IDXPGnumber’.

With this approach, the \indexentry line which Eplain writes to the .idx file looks like this:

\indexentry{entry|hlidxpage{cs}}{pageno}

where \hlidxpage is the command that is defined by Eplain to take two arguments: a name of page number encapsulator (cs) and a page number (pageno). In the .ind file that MakeIndex will generate, the page number will appear as

\hlidxpage{cs}{pageno}

The advantage of this approach is that all features of MakeIndex are intact. The drawback is that links in the index do not point to exact locations of indexed terms on a page, but to the top of a page on which the term appears.

Another disadvantage is that this approach depends on the page range and page list separators which MakeIndex was configured to output. \hlidxpage must be able to parse the first page number in a page range like ‘1--4’. In addition, page list parsing is needed because MakeIndex combines two consecutive page numbers in one call to the page number encapsulator, so \hlidxpage can be passed, e.g., ‘1, 2’ for the pageno. In this last case, \hlidxpage splits the two page numbers, applies \cs to each of them, and makes each of the page numbers a link to the appropriate page. Note that this will alter typesetting slightly, because now the page list separator (a comma followed by a space, by default) is not typeset using the page number encapsulator (\cs).

Eplain’s defaults for the page list and page number delimiters are the same as those in MakeIndex, a comma followed by a space (‘, ’) and two dashes (‘--’), respectively. If you customize MakeIndex to use different delimiters, you must not forget to let Eplain know about them with the commands

\setidxpagelistdelimiter{list-delim}
\setidxpagerangedelimiter{page-delim}

(see Page list and page range parsers).


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5.3.8.3 Choosing destination placement

The approach that Eplain should use for the index terms can be selected in the \enablehyperlinks command. The optional argument it accepts is a comma-separated list of options. The idxexact option selects the first approach, idxpage the second, and idxnone disables hyperlink support for the index terms altogether, in case you want to stop Eplain from writing its link wrappers into the .idx file. The default is idxpage.

For example:

\enablehyperlinks[idxexact]

selects the first approach (“exact index links”).


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5.3.8.4 Index page list and page range parsers

The macros that Eplain uses to parse page lists and page ranges, \idxparselist and \idxparserange, can sometimes be useful when defining page number encapsulators. See Page list and page range parsers, for the description of these commands and an example of their usage.


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5.3.8.5 Hyperlinks in see and see also entries

There is no automatic support for hyperlinks with “see” and “see also” index entries, as there is not enough information to trace the parameters of \indexsee and \indexseealso to corresponding index entries. But if desired, this can be implemented with \hldest and \hlstart (see Explicit hyperlinks); for example:

\sidx{semantic theory of truth@%
      \leavevmode\hldest{}{}{idx:theo truth}semantic theory of truth}
…
\sidx[seealso]{truth}[definition of]%
      {\hlstart{}{}{idx:theo truth}semantic theory of truth\hlend}

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5.3.9 Footnote hyperlinks: foot, footback

The ‘foot’ link and destination groups include the \numberedfootnote and \footnote macros (see Footnotes). The ‘footback’ groups include the same macros, but control parameters for links and destinations created inside the footnote to point back to the footnote mark within the text body.

The macros use hyperlink labels generated by \hlfootlabel and \hlfootbacklabel. The default formats for the labels are ‘FOOTnumber’ and ‘FOOTBnumber’, respectively, where number is the value of the count register \hlfootlabelnumber. This register is incremented at every footnote.

Generally, footnote hyperlinks are not of much use, because the footnotes are usually placed on the same page as the footnote mark. Therefore, footnote hyperlinks are disabled by default. Here is how you can turn them on selectively, without affecting the other kinds of hyperlinks (see Turning hyperlinks on/off for a group):

\hldeston[foot,footback]
\hlon[foot,footback]

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5.3.10 Contents hyperlinks

There is currently no special support for hyperlinks in the table of contents (see Contents), but implementing them with the \hldest and \hlstart … \hlend commands (see Explicit hyperlinks) should be possible.


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5.4 Hyperlink drivers

This section describes the hyperlink drivers: the types of hyperlinks they support, and the options they accept. During the first reading, you may only want to skim through this section.

Some of the descriptions below come from Portable Document Format Reference Manual Version 1.3, March 11, 1999.


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5.4.1 Options supported by all drivers

This subsection describes the destination and link options which are supported by all hyperlink drivers.

Destination options supported by all drivers

raise

Specifies how much to raise destinations above the baseline. When set to zero or empty, destinations are placed at the baseline.

It is usually convenient to set this option to some variable parameter, so that the height to which destinations are raised is automatically adjusted according to the current context. For example, setting it to \normalbaselineskip (or some fraction of it, like 1.7\normalbaselineskip) makes the setting appropriate for different point sizes, in case your document uses more than one.

The default setting is \normalbaselineskip. Initially, the destgroups do not define this option, so they fall back on the default, except for the ‘eq’ destgroup, for which this option is set to 1.7\normalbaselineskip, to accommodate the usual cases of large operators in displayed math.

Example: \hldestopts[eq]{raise=2.5\normalbaselineskip}

Link options supported by all drivers

colormodel
color

These two options define the color to be used for rendering the link text. The colors are used only when a \color command is defined, e.g., by loading the LaTeX ‘color’ package (see Packages known to work). The \color command is called as \color[colormodel]{color}, where colormodel and color are the definitions of the colormodel and color options, respectively. However, if colormodel is empty, the optional argument to \color is omitted; and if color is empty, the \color command is omitted altogether. The default setting is colormodel=cmyk and color=0.28,1,1,0.35.

When specifying colors with several components delimited by commas (e.g., RGB and CMYK colors in the LaTeX ‘color’ package), it is not possible to specify the components directly in the option list of \hlopts, because comma is the option list delimiter. With the ‘color’ package, it is possible to specify such colors by defining a custom color with \definecolor and using the new color name with an empty colormodel (see examples below).

Examples:

\hlopts{colormodel=,color=blue}% predefined color
\definecolor{mycolor}{rgb}{.3,.8,.95}
\hlopts{colormodel=,color=mycolor}% custom color
\hlopts{colormodel=gray,color=.4}

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5.4.2 Hyperlink driver hypertex

HyperTeX is a standard for inclusion of hyperlink information in TeX (and LaTeX) documents (see http://arxiv.org/hypertex). This standard defines a set of hyperlink tags implemented as \special commands written into the DVI file. The major advantage of such standard is that a single .dvi file containing HyperTeX commands can be viewed by any HyperTeX-enabled viewer (e.g., any more or less modern version of xdvi) or converted to other file formats (e.g., PDF) by any HyperTeX-enabled DVI converter (e.g., dvipdfmx or dvips with Ghostscript’s ps2pdf script).

The downside to the standard is that it is by design “the common factor” of other formats supporting hyperlinks, so many features of a particular file format cannot be supported by HyperTeX. Therefore, if you need to use special features of a particular format, HyperTeX is not a good choice. For the PDF file format, Eplain provides the pdftex and dvipdfm drivers which provide fine control over the PDF options (see Hyperlink drivers pdftex and dvipdfm).

For more information on programs which support the HyperTeX standard, please see

http://arxiv.org/hypertex
http://www.tug.org/tex-archive/support/hypertex/hypertex

For convenience, we list a few HyperTeX-enabled converters:

dvips

Note that you need to pass the -z option to dvips to tell it to preserve the information about the hyperlinks. To generate a .pdf file with hyperlinks, you can use the ps2pdf script of Ghostscript. For example, if foo.tex is a TeX file using HyperTeX commands, then

prompt$ tex foo.tex
prompt$ dvips -z foo.dvi -o
prompt$ ps2pdf foo.ps

will produce foo.pdf with hyperlinks.

dvipdfm
dvipdfmx

No special command line arguments are required, these programs automatically detect the HyperTeX commands.

One more note is in place: support for the HyperTeX commands varies from one previewer/converter to another, so you might need to experiment to see if what you need is supported by the program(s) you intend to use. For example, dvips(k) as of version 5.92b converts all internal hyperlinks into page links pointing to a page containing the destination, so that “exact” linking to destinations is not possible (this was confirmed to be a bug and most probably has already been fixed in later versions of dvips(k)); dvipdfm as of version 0.13.2c and dvipdfmx as of version 20040411 do not correctly parse links to external local files, and produce a URL link instead of a file link.


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5.4.2.1 Destination types for hypertex

xyz

“Current position”. This is the default type.

Example: \hldest{xyz}{}{dest123}

raw

The destination specification (in the form of a HyperTeX \special) is taken from the command sequence \cs, where cs is the value of the cmd option. In the definition of \cs, use \@hllabel to refer to the hyperlink label. This option is intended to be used with destgroups (see Setting hyperlink types and options), as it does not make sense in a direct call to \hldest—you can just call the raw command.

Example:

\makeatletter
\def\mydest{\special{html:<a name="\@hllabel">}%
            \special{html:</a>}}
\resetatcatcode
\indent\hldest{raw}{cmd=mydest}{SpecialDest}
  Special destination.

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5.4.2.2 Destination options for hypertex

cmd

Name of the macro (without the leading ‘\’) containing a HyperTeX \special for the raw destination.

See Destination types for hypertex, the description of the raw destination, for an example.


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5.4.2.3 Link types for hypertex

name

Go to a “named destination”. The label is the destination name. All destinations in HyperTeX are named destinations. This is the default type.

Example: \hlstart{name}{}{dest123}Link to dest123\hlend

url

Go to a URL. The label is the URL.

Example:

\hlstart{url}{}{http://tug.org/eplain/}Eplain home\hlend
filename

Go to a named destination in another file. The label is the destination name. The file name is specified by the file option. The file name extension can be specified separately by the ext option. The idea is to set the ext option globally at the beginning of the document to avoid hard-coding the extension together with the file name within each link—HyperTeX is not restricted to any single output format, it can be DVI, PDF, possibly other formats.

Example:

\hlopts{ext=.pdf}
\hlstart{filename}{file=book}{dest123}
  Link to dest123 in file `book.pdf'\hlend
raw

The link specification (in the form of a HyperTeX \special) is taken from the command sequence \cs, where cs is the value of the cmd option. In the definition of \cs, use \@hllabel to refer to the hyperlink label. Use the predefined command \hlhash to insert the # characters. This option is intended to be used with linkgroups (see Setting hyperlink types and options), as it does not make sense in a direct call to \hlstart—you can just call the raw command.

Example:

\makeatletter
\def\mylink{\special{html:<a href="\hlhash\@hllabel">}}
\resetatcatcode
\hlstart{raw}{cmd=mylink}{SpecialDest}
  Link to the special destination.\hlend

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5.4.2.4 Link options for hypertex

cmd

Name of the macro (without the leading ‘\’) containing a HyperTeX \special for the raw link.

See Link types for hypertex, the description of the raw link, for an example.

file

File name for the filename link type. See also the ext option.

See Link types for hypertex, the description of the filename link, for an example.

ext

File name extension for the filename link type. The idea is to set the ext option globally at the beginning of the document to avoid hard-coding the extension together with the file name within each link—HyperTeX is not restricted to any single output format, it can be DVI, PDF, possibly other formats.

See Link types for hypertex, the description of the filename link, for an example.


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5.4.3 Hyperlink drivers pdftex and dvipdfm

This subsection describes link and destination types and options supported by the pdftex and dvipdfm drivers. Many of the hyperlink types and options are common to both drivers, so we describe them together.


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5.4.3.1 Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm

xyz

“Current position”. The option zoom specifies magnification to use (zero or empty means leave magnification unchanged, which is the default). This is the default type.

For dvipdfm: the options left and top specify position coordinates to use (empty options mean current position coordinate, which is the default).

Example: \hldest{xyz}{zoom=2000}{dest123}

fit

Fit the page to the window.

Example: \hldest{fit}{}{dest123}

fith

Fit the width of the page to the window.

For dvipdfm: the top option specifies vertical position (default is empty, meaning current position).

Example: \hldest{fith}{}{dest123}

fitv

Fit the height of the page to the window.

For dvipdfm: The option left specifies horizontal position (default is empty, meaning current position).

Example: \hldest{fitv}{}{dest123}

fitb

Fit the page’s bounding box to the window.

Example: \hldest{fitb}{}{dest123}

fitbh

Fit the width of the page’s bounding box to the window.

For dvipdfm: the option top specifies vertical position (default is empty, meaning current position).

Example: \hldest{fitbh}{}{dest123}

fitbv

Fit the height of the page’s bounding box to the window.

For dvipdfm: the option left specifies horizontal position (default is empty, meaning current position).

Example: \hldest{fitbv}{}{dest123}

fitr

For pdftex: fit the rectangle specified by the options width, height and depth (as a TeX rule specification) in the window. For dimensions set to empty, the corresponding value of the parent box is used (these are the defaults).

For dvipdfm: fit the rectangle specified by the options left, bottom, right and top (in PostScript points, 72 points per inch) in the window. For dimensions set to empty, current position coordinate is substituted (these are the defaults).

Example for pdftex:

\hldest{fitr}{width=\hsize,
              height=.5\vsize,depth=0pt}{dest123}

Example for dvipdfm:

\hldest{fitr}{left=72,bottom=72,
              right=720,top=360}{dest123}
raw

The destination specification (in the form of a pdfTeX command or a dvipdfm \special) is taken from the command sequence \cs, where cs is the value of the cmd option. In the definition of \cs, use \@hllabel to refer to the hyperlink label. This option is intended to be used with destgroups (see Setting hyperlink types and options), as it does not make sense in a direct call to \hldest—you can just call the raw command.

Example for pdftex:

\makeatletter
\def\mydest{\pdfdest name{\@hllabel} xyz}
\resetatcatcode
\hldesttype{raw}
\hldestopts{cmd=mydest}

Example for dvipdfm:

\makeatletter
\def\mydest{\special{pdf: dest (\@hllabel)
                          [@thispage /XYZ @xpos @ypos 0]}}
\resetatcatcode
\hldesttype{raw}
\hldestopts{cmd=mydest}

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5.4.3.2 Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm

With respect to the destination options, the pdftex and dvipdfm differ in the way the fit rectangle is specified (relative coordinates for pdftex, absolute coordinates for dvipdfm).

Common destination options

cmd

Name of the macro (without the leading ‘\’) containing a pdfTeX command or a dvipdfm \special for the raw destination.

See Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm, the description of the raw destination, for an example.

zoom

Magnification ratio times 1000 (like TeX’s scale factor). Zero or empty means leave magnification unchanged, which is the default.

Example: \hldest{xyz}{zoom=2000}{dest123}

pdftex-specific destination options

The dimension options below must be specified as a TeX rule specification. When set to empty, the corresponding value of the parent box is used (this is the default for all dimension options).

depth

Depth of the fit rectangle for the fitr destination.

height

Height of the fit rectangle for the fitr destination.

width

Width of the fit rectangle for the fitr destination.

Example:

\hldest{fitr}{width=\hsize,
              height=.5\vsize,depth=0pt}{dest123}

dvipdfm-specific destination options

The dimension options below must be specified in PostScript points (72 points per inch), as a number without the ‘bp’ unit name. When set to empty, the current position coordinate is used (this is the default for all dimension options).

bottom

Bottom position coordinate of a box specification for the various destination types.

left

Left position coordinate of a box specification for the various destination types.

right

Right position coordinate of a box specification for the various destination types.

top

Top position coordinate of a box specification for the various destination types.

Example:

\hldest{fitr}{left=72,bottom=72,
              right=720,top=360}{dest123}

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5.4.3.3 Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm

Link types are the same for the pdftex and dvipdfm drivers, except that the pdftex driver provides one additional link type num (link to a numbered destination). dvipdfm does not support numbered destinations, therefore it does not have this link type. Note that all destinations created by Eplain hyperlink macros are named destinations; to define a numbered destination, you have to use low-level pdfTeX commands.

Common link types

name

Go to a “named destination”. The label is the destination name. All destinations created with \hldest are named destinations (see Explicit hyperlinks). This is the default type.

Example: \hlstart{name}{}{dest123}Link to dest123\hlend

url

Go to a URL. The label is the URL.

Example: \hlstart{url}{}{http://tug.org/eplain/}Eplain home\hlend

page

Go to a page. The label is the page number (counting from 1). Page fitting is specified by the pagefit option.

Example:

\hlstart{page}{pagefit=/FitH 600}{123}
  Link to page~123\hlend
filename

Go to a named destination in another file. The label is the destination name. The file name is specified by the file option. Page fitting is specified by the pagefit option. The newwin option specifies whether the destination document is opened in the same window or in a new window.

Example:

\hlstart{filename}{file=book.pdf,newwin=1}{dest123}
  Link to dest123 in file `book.pdf'\hlend
filepage

Go to a page in another file. The label is the page number (counting from 1). The file name is specified by the file option. Page fitting is specified by the pagefit option. The newwin option specifies whether the destination document is opened in the same window or in a new window.

Example:

\hlstart{filepage}{file=book.pdf,newwin=,
                   pagefit=/FitR 50 100 300 500}{1}
  Link to page~1 in file `book.pdf'\hlend
raw

The link specification (in the form of a pdfTeX command or a dvipdfm \special primitive) is taken from the command sequence \cs, where cs is the value of the cmd option. In the definition of \cs, use \@hllabel to refer to the hyperlink label. This option is intended to be used with linkgroups (see Setting hyperlink types and options), as it does not make sense in a direct call to \hlstart—you can just call the raw command.

Example for pdftex:

% Redirect all \url links to the first page
\def\mycmd{\pdfstartlink goto page 1 {/Fit}}
\hltype[url]{raw}
\hlopts[url]{cmd=mycmd}

Example for dvipdfm:

% Redirect all \url links to the first page
\def\mycmd{\special{pdf: beginann <</Type/Annot /Subtype/Link
                                    /Dest[0 /Fit]>>}}
\hltype[url]{raw}
\hlopts[url]{cmd=mycmd}

pdftex-specific link types

num

Go to a “numbered destination”. The label is the destination number.

Example: \hlstart{num}{}{123}Link to 123\hlend


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5.4.3.4 Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm

Link options are mostly the same for the pdftex and dvipdfm drivers. The pdftex driver has additional options to specify link dimensions.

Common link options

bcolor

Border color. An array of three numbers in the range 0 to 1, representing a color in DeviceRGB.

Example: \hlstart{name}{bcolor=.1 .5 1}{dest123}Link\hlend

bdash

Array of numbers representing on and off stroke lengths for drawing dashes.

Example: \hlstart{name}{bstyle=D,bdash=2 4}{dest123}Link\hlend

bstyle

Link border style:

S

The border is drawn as a solid line.

D

The border is drawn with a dashed line (the dash pattern is specified by the bdash option).

B

The border is drawn in a beveled style.

I

The border is drawn in an inset style.

U

The border is drawn as a line on the bottom of the link rectangle.

The default is ‘S’.

Example: \hlstart{name}{bstyle=D,bdash=2 4}{dest123}Link\hlend

bwidth

Border width in PostScript points (72 points per inch). The default is 1.

Example: \hlstart{name}{bwidth=2}{dest123}Link\hlend

cmd

Name of the macro (without the leading ‘\’) containing a pdfTeX command or a dvipdfm \special for the raw link.

See Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm, the description of the raw link, for an example.

file

File name for the filename and filepage link types.

See Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm, the descriptions of the filename and filepage links, for an example.

hlight

Link border highlight modes:

I

The rectangle specified by the bounding box of the link is inverted.

N

No highlighting is done.

O

The border of the link is inverted.

P

The region underneath the bounding box of the link is drawn inset into the page.

The default is ‘I’.

Example: \hlstart{name}{bstyle=S,hlight=O}{dest123}Link\hlend

newwin

For the filename and filepage links, specifies whether the destination document is opened in the same window or in a new window. The settings are:

0

Open in the same window.

non-0

Open in a new window.

empty

Behavior according to the viewer settings.

The default is empty.

See Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm, the descriptions of the filename and filepage links, for an example.

pagefit

For the page and filepage links, specifies how the page must be fitted to the window. pagefit specification is written to the PDF file as is, so it must conform to the PDF standard.

See Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm, the descriptions of the page and filepage links, for an example.

pdftex-specific link options

The dimension options below must be specified as a TeX rule specification. When set to empty, the corresponding value of the parent box is used (this is the default for all dimension options).

depth

Depth of the link.

height

Height of the link.

width

Width of the link.

Example:

\hlstart{name}{width=5in,height=20pc,depth=0pt}{dest123}
  Link\hlend

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5.4.4 Hyperlink driver nolinks

Select this driver to suppress all hyperlinks in your document.

Selecting this driver is quite different from not selecting any driver at all, or from selecting some driver and then turning hyperlinks off for the entire document with \hloff and \hldestoff (see Turning hyperlinks on/off).

The purpose of \hldestoff and \hloff is to mark (parts) of your document where hyperlinks should never appear. (Imagine you want to prevent a cross-referencing macro from generating a link at a certain spot in your document.)

If instead you have prepared a document with hyperlinks and just want to compile a version without them, it is better to select the driver nolinks. This ensures that spacing and page-breaking are the same as what you were getting with hyperlinks enabled.

The reason for this is that hyperlinks are produced by the \special primitives or low-level hyperlink commands. Each such command is placed inside a whatsit (an internal TeX object), which may introduce legitimate breakpoints at places where none would exist without the whatsits. The macros \hldestoff and \hloff disable the hyperlink macros completely, so that no whatsits are produced.

In contrast, the nolinks driver does not completely disable hyperlink macros. Instead, it defines them to merely write to the log file (what gets written is unimportant). This also produces whatsits, thus imitating the whatsits from the hyperlink commands. (This trick was borrowed from the LaTeX ‘color’ package.)

Another reason for using nolinks is that in horizontal mode \hldest places destinations inside boxes of zero width, height, and depth. When you say \hldestoff, \hldest will omit both destination definitions and these boxes. The missing boxes can again cause the typesetting to be inconsistent with that with destinations enabled. Here again, the nolinks driver helps by defining \hldest to produce the empty boxes.

So, if you are planning to produce versions of your PDF document both with and without hyperlinks, here is the recommended way to enable the hyperlinks under pdfTeX:

\ifpdf
  \enablehyperlinks
\else
  \enablehyperlinks[nolinks]%
\fi

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5.5 Setting hyperlink types and options

You can define default types for links and destinations, which will be used when you do not specify a type in \hlstart or \hldest. Similarly, you can define default values for the options; the default value for an option is used when you do not set the option in the argument to \hlstart or \hldest.

The parameters for implicit links and destinations can be customized by setting the “group” types and options. When not set, the defaults are used.

All these settings are local to the current (TeX) group, so if you want to set an option temporarily, you can do so inside a \begingroup…\endgroup block; when the group ends, the previous settings are restored.


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5.5.1 Setting default types and options

The default types for links and destinations can be set with the following commands:

\hltype{type}
\hldesttype{type}

where type is one of the link/destination types supported by the selected hyperlink driver (see Hyperlink drivers).

Default values for the options can be set with the following commands:

\hlopts{options}
\hldestopts{options}

where options is a comma-separated list of option assignments in the format ‘option=value’. Again, what options are allowed depends on the selected hyperlink driver.

Many people regard the default boxed links as not aesthetic and intruding on page layout. The reason why boxed links are the default is that the links are not colored until you load the LaTeX ‘color’ package (see Loading LaTeX packages) or use other means to define the \color command; therefore, not producing any kind of link border may result in the links not being marked in any way. However, when the links are actually colored, there is no need to produce the link boxes anymore; to avoid the boxes, you can set the default border width to zero (if the driver you use supports the link option bwidth; see Hyperlink drivers):

\hlopts{bwidth=0}

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5.5.2 Setting group types

When called with an optional argument, as in

\hltype[groups]{type}
\hldesttype[groups]{type}

where groups is a comma-separated list of groups, \hltype and \hldesttype set the type for each group from groups to type. The default type is used for all groups with an empty type (this is the initial setting for all groups, except that the type for the ‘url’ linkgroup is set to ‘url’ by the drivers which support this link type).

There are two special “groups” which can be used inside the groups list. An empty group sets the default type. This allows to set the default type and group types in one command, for example:

\hltype[eq,]{type}

sets the link type for the ‘eq’ linkgroup and the default link type to type.

Another special group is a star (‘*’) group, which signifies all defined groups. For example, the command

\hldesttype[*,]{type}

sets the destination type to type for each group, as well as the default destination type.


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5.5.3 Setting group options

Option values for each group are stored as a list of option assignments. This list does not have to contain every supported option. Values for options missing from this list are taken from the default option values.

To manipulate the list of option values for the groups, you use the \hlopts and \hldestopts commands with an optional argument:

\hlopts[groups]{options}
\hldestopts[groups]{options}
\hlopts![groups]{options}
\hldestopts![groups]{options}

where groups is a comma-separated list of groups and options is a comma-separated list of option assignments. The two special “groups”, the empty group and the star (‘*’) group, have the same meaning as for \hltype and \hldesttype. When used without the exclamation mark, \hlopts and \hldestopts preserve the current list of options for the groups, and only update the options listed in options. If you add the exclamation mark, the current list of options for each group in groups is discarded and the new list is set to options.

The “overriding” nature of the ‘!’ is appropriate when you give a complete specification of the options for a group, e.g., at the beginning of your document. On the other hand, when you want to adjust some option(s) and leave others intact, you should use the macros without the ‘!’.

For example, with displayed mathematical formulas, you often need to adjust the ‘raise’ option for the ‘eq’ destgroup, because the formulas often contain large parentheses and brackets. But when doing so, you want to leave the other settings unchanged. To achieve this, call \hldestopts without the ‘!’, for example:

$$\hldestopts[eq]{raise=2.5\normalbaselineskip}
…
$$

The display commands (‘$$’) implicitly put the entire formula inside a (TeX) group (\begingroup…\endgroup), so you do not need to isolate the setting of the ‘raise’ option—it will be restored after the closing ‘$$’.

Initially, Eplain sets the option lists for almost all groups to empty, so that the groups fall back on the default values for all options. The one exception to this rule is the ‘eq’ destgroup, whose initial option list contains one setting:

raise=1.7\normalbaselineskip

This setting usually accommodates the large operators, which often appear in displayed math.


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5.6 Turning hyperlinks on/off

Links and/or destinations can be turned on or off globally by disabling the low-level commands, or for each group individually.

All these settings are local to the current (TeX) group, so if you want to enable or disable links/destinations temporarily, you can do so inside a \begingroup…\endgroup block; when the group ends, the previous settings are restored.


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5.6.1 Turning low-level commands on/off

The low-level commands \hlstart, \hlend and \hldest can be turned on/off with the following commands:

\hldeston
\hldestoff
\hlon
\hloff

See Hyperlink driver nolinks, for the implications of using these commands to disable hyperlinks for the entire document.


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5.6.2 Turning hyperlinks on/off for a group

If you want to disable links/destinations produced by certain groups, you can give a list of the groups as an optional argument to these commands:

\hldeston[groups]
\hldestoff[groups]
\hlon[groups]
\hloff[groups]

where groups is the list of linkgroups/destgroups. This list can contain two special groups. The empty group switches the low-level commands (see Turning low-level commands on/off), and the star (‘*’) group operates on all defined groups.

Note that turning off the low-level commands disables all hyperlinks globally, including groups which have them enabled. Turning off certain linkgroups/destgroups records the fact that the macros in the group should not produce links/destinations. To illustrate the distinction, assume that all links are on; after the following sequence of commands:

\hloff
\hloff[eq]
\hlon

all links are on except for the ‘eq’ linkgroup.


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6 Arrow theoretic diagrams

This chapter describes definitions for producing commutative diagrams.

Steven Smith wrote this documentation (and the macros).


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6.1 Slanted lines and vectors

The macros \drawline and \drawvector provide the capability found in LaTeX’s picture mode to draw slanted lines and vectors of certain directions. Both of these macros take three arguments: two integer arguments to specify the direction of the line or vector, and one argument to specify its length. For example, ‘\drawvector(-4,1){60pt}’ produces the vector which lies in the 2d quadrant, has a slope of minus 1/4, and a width of 60 pt.

Note that if an \hbox is placed around \drawline or \drawvector, then the width of the \hbox will be the positive dimension specified in the third argument, except when a vertical line or vector is specified, e.g., \drawline(0,1){1in}, which has zero width. If the specified direction lies in the 1st or 2d quadrant (e.g., (1,1) or (-2,3)), then the \hbox will have positive height and zero depth. Conversely, if the specified direction lies in the 3d or 4th quadrant (e.g., (-1,-1) or (2,-3)), then the \hbox will have positive depth and zero height.

There are a finite number of directions that can be specified. For \drawline, the absolute value of each integer defining the direction must be less than or equal to six, i.e., (7,-1) is incorrect, but (6,-1) is acceptable. For \drawvector, the absolute value of each integer must be less than or equal to four. Furthermore, the two integers cannot have common divisors; therefore, if a line with slope 2 is desired, say (2,1) instead of (4,2). Also, specify (1,0) instead of, say, (3,0) for horizontal lines and likewise for vertical lines.

Finally, these macros depend upon the LaTeX font line10. If your site doesn’t have this font, ask your system administrator to get it. Future enhancements will include macros to draw dotted lines and dotted vectors of various directions.


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6.2 Commutative diagrams

The primitive commands \drawline and \drawvector can be used to typeset arrow theoretic diagrams. This section describes (1) macros to facilitate typesetting arrows and morphisms, and (2) macros to facilitate the construction of commutative diagrams. All macros described in this section must be used in math mode.


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6.2.1 Arrows and morphisms

The macros \mapright and \mapleft produce right and left pointing arrows, respectively. Use superscript (^) to place a morphism above the arrow, e.g., ‘\mapright^\alpha’; use subscript (_) to place a morphism below the arrow, e.g., ‘\mapright_{\tilde l}’. Superscripts and subscripts may be used simulataneously, e.g., ‘\mapright^\pi_{\rm epimor.}’.

Similarly, the macros \mapup and \mapdown produce up and down pointing arrows, respectively. Use \rt to place a morphism to the right of the arrow, e.g., ‘\mapup\rt{\rm id}’; use \lft to place a morphism to the left of the arrow, e.g., ‘\mapup\lft\omega’. \lft and \rt may be used simultaneously, e.g., ‘\mapdown\lft\pi\rt{\rm monomor.}’.

Slanted arrows are produced by the macro \arrow, which takes a direction argument (e.g., ‘\arrow(3,-4)’). Use \rt and \lft to place morphisms to the right and left, respectively, of the arrow. A slanted line (no arrowhead) is produced with the macro \sline, whose syntax is identical to that of \arrow.

The length of these macros is predefined by the default TeX dimensions \harrowlength, for horizontal arrows (or lines), \varrowlength, for vertical arrows (or lines), and \sarrowlength, for slanted arrows (or lines). To change any of these dimensions, say, e.g., ‘\harrowlength=40pt’. As with all other TeX dimensions, the change may be as global or as local as you like. Furthermore, the placement of morphisms on the arrows is controlled by the dimensions \hmorphposn, \vmorphposn, and \morphdist. The first two dimensions control the horizontal and vertical position of the morphism from its default position; the latter dimension controls the distance of the morphism from the arrow. If you have more than one morphism per arrow (i.e., a ^/_ or \lft/\rt construction), use the parameters \hmorphposnup, \hmorphposndn, \vmorphposnup, \vmorphposndn, \hmorphposnrt, \hmorphposnlft, \vmorphposnrt, and \vmorphposnlft. The default values of all these dimensions are provided in the section on parameters that follows below.

There is a family of macros to produce horizontal lines, arrows, and adjoint arrows. The following macros produce horizontal maps and have the same syntax as \mapright:

\mapright

$X\mapright Y$ = (a right arrow).

\mapleft

$X\mapleft Y$

\hline

$X\hline Y$

\bimapright

$X\bimapright Y$

\bimapleft

$X\bimapleft Y$

\adjmapright

$X\adjmapright Y$

\adjmapleft

$X\adjmapleft Y$

\bihline

$X\bihline Y$

There is also a family of macros to produce vertical lines, arrows, and adjoint arrows. The following macros produce vertical maps and have the same syntax as \mapdown:

\mapdown

(a down arrow)

\mapup

(an up arrow)

\vline

(vertical line)

\bimapdown

(two down arrows)

\bimapup

(two up arrows)

\adjmapdown

(two adjoint arrows; down then up)

\adjmapup

(two adjoint arrows; up then down)

\bivline

(two vertical lines)

Finally, there is a family of macros to produce slanted lines, arrows, and adjoint arrows. The following macros produce slanted maps and have the same syntax as \arrow:

\arrow

(a slanted arrow)

\sline

(a slanted line)

\biarrow

(two straight arrows)

\adjarrow

(two adjoint arrows)

\bisline

(two straight lines)

The width between double arrows is controlled by the parameter \channelwidth. The parameters \hchannel and \vchannel, if nonzero, override \channelwidth by controlling the horizontal and vertical shifting from the first arrow to the second.

There are no adornments on these arrows to distinguish inclusions from epimorphisms from monomorphisms. Many texts, such as Lang’s book Algebra, use as a tasteful alternative the symbol ‘inc’ (in roman) next to an arrow to denote inclusion.

Future enhancements will include a mechanism to draw curved arrows found in, e.g., the Snake Lemma, by employing a version of the \path macros of Appendix D of The TeXbook.


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6.2.2 Construction of commutative diagrams

There are two approaches to the construction of commutative diagrams described here. The first approach, and the simplest, treats commutative diagrams like fancy matrices, as Knuth does in Exercise 18.46 of The TeXbook. This case is covered by the macro \commdiag, which is an altered version of the Plain TeX macro \matrix. An example suffices to demonstrate this macro. The following commutative diagram (illustrating the covering homotopy property; Bott and Tu, Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology) is produced with the code

$$\commdiag{Y&\mapright^f&E\cr \mapdown&\arrow(3,2)\lft{f_t}&\mapdown\cr
Y\times I&\mapright^{\bar f_t}&X}$$

Of course, the parameters may be changed to produce a different effect. The following commutative diagram (illustrating the universal mapping property; Warner, Foundations of Differentiable Manifolds and Lie Groups) is produced with the code

$$\varrowlength=20pt
\commdiag{V\otimes W\cr \mapup\lft\phi&\arrow(3,-1)\rt{\tilde l}\cr
V\times W&\mapright^l&U\cr}$$

A diagram containing isosceles triangles is achieved by placing the apex of the triangle in the center column, as shown in the example (illustrating all constant minimal realizations of a linear system; Brockett, Finite Dimensional Linear Systems) which is produced with the code

$$\sarrowlength=.42\harrowlength
\commdiag{&R^m\cr &\arrow(-1,-1)\lft{\bf B}\quad \arrow(1,-1)\rt{\bf G}\cr
R^n&\mapright^{\bf P}&R^n\cr
\mapdown\lft{e^{{\bf A}t}}&&\mapdown\rt{e^{{\bf F}t}}\cr
R^n&\mapright^{\bf P}&R^n\cr
&\arrow(1,-1)\lft{\bf C}\quad \arrow(-1,-1)\rt{\bf H}\cr
&R^q\cr}$$

Other commutative diagram examples appear in the file commdiags.tex, which is distributed with this package.

In these examples the arrow lengths and line slopes were carefully chosen to blend with each other. In the first example, the default settings for the arrow lengths are used, but a direction for the arrow must be chosen. The ratio of the default horizontal and vertical arrow lengths is approximately the golden mean the arrow direction closest to this mean is (3,2). In the second example, a slope of is desired and the default horizontal arrow length is 60 pt; therefore, choose a vertical arrow length of 20 pt. You may affect the interline glue settings of \commdiag by redefining the macro \commdiagbaselines. (cf. Exercise 18.46 of The TeXbook and the section on parameters below.)

The width, height, and depth of all morphisms are hidden so that the morphisms’ size do not affect arrow positions. This can cause a large morphism at the top or bottom of a diagram to impinge upon the text surrounding the diagram. To overcome this problem, use TeX’s \noalign primitive to insert a \vskip immediately above or below the offending line, e.g., ‘$$\commdiag{\noalign{\vskip6pt}X&\mapright^\int&Y\cr ...}’.

The macro \commdiag is too simple to be used for more complicated diagrams, which may have intersecting or overlapping arrows. A second approach, borrowed from Francis Borceux’s Diagram macros for LaTeX, treats the commutative diagram like a grid of identically shaped boxes. To compose the commutative diagram, first draw an equally spaced grid, e.g., on a piece of scratch paper. Then draw each element (vertices and arrows) of the commutative diagram on this grid, centered at each grid point. Finally, use the macro \gridcommdiag to implement your design as a TeX alignment. For example, the cubic diagram that appears in Francis Borceux’s documentation can be implemented on a 7 by 7 grid, and is achieved with the code

$$\harrowlength=48pt \varrowlength=48pt \sarrowlength=20pt
\def\cross#1#2{\setbox0=\hbox{$#1$}%
  \hbox to\wd0{\hss\hbox{$#2$}\hss}\llap{\unhbox0}}
\gridcommdiag{&&B&&\mapright^b&&D\cr
&\arrow(1,1)\lft a&&&&\arrow(1,1)\lft d\cr
A&&\cross{\hmorphposn=12pt\mapright^c}{\vmorphposn=-12pt\mapdown\lft f}
&&C&&\mapdown\rt h\cr\cr
\mapdown\lft e&&F&&\cross{\hmorphposn=-12pt\mapright_j}
{\vmorphposn=12pt\mapdown\rt g}&&H\cr
&\arrow(1,1)\lft i&&&&\arrow(1,1)\rt l\cr
E&&\mapright_k&&G\cr}$$

The dimensions \hgrid and \vgrid control the horizontal and vertical spacing of the grid used by \gridcommdiag. The default setting for both of these dimensions is 15 pt. Note that in the example of the cube the arrow lengths must be adjusted so that the arrows overlap into neighboring boxes by the desired amount. Hence, the \gridcommdiag method, albeit more powerful, is less automatic than the simpler \commdiag method. Furthermore, the ad hoc macro \cross is introduced to allow the effect of overlapping arrows. Finally, note that the positions of four of the morphisms are adjusted by setting \hmorphposn and \vmorphposn.

One is not restricted to a square grid. For example, the proof of Zassenhaus’s Butterfly Lemma can be illustrated by the diagram (appearing in Lang’s book Algebra) This diagram may be implemented on a 9 by 12 grid with an aspect ratio of 1/2, and is set with the code

$$\hgrid=16pt \vgrid=8pt \sarrowlength=32pt
\def\cross#1#2{\setbox0=\hbox{$#1$}%
  \hbox to\wd0{\hss\hbox{$#2$}\hss}\llap{\unhbox0}}
\def\l#1{\llap{$#1$\hskip.5em}}
\def\r#1{\rlap{\hskip.5em$#1$}}
\gridcommdiag{&&U&&&&V\cr &&\bullet&&&&\bullet\cr
&&\sarrowlength=16pt\sline(0,1)&&&&\sarrowlength=16pt\sline(0,1)\cr
&&\l{u(U\cap V)}\bullet&&&&\bullet\r{(U\cap V)v}\cr
&&&\sline(2,-1)&&\sline(2,1)\cr
&&\cross{=}{\sline(0,1)}&&\bullet&&\cross{=}{\sline(0,1)}\cr\cr
&&\l{^{\textstyle u(U\cap v)}}\bullet&&\cross{=}{\sline(0,1)}&&
 \bullet\r{^{\textstyle(u\cap V)v}}\cr
&\sline(2,1)&&\sline(2,-1)&&\sline(2,1)&&\sline(2,-1)\cr
\l{u}\bullet&&&&\bullet&&&&\bullet\r{v}\cr
&\sline(2,-1)&&\sline(2,1)&&\sline(2,-1)&&\sline(2,1)\cr
&&\bullet&&&&\bullet\cr &&u\cap V&&&&U\cap v\cr}$$

Again, the construction of this diagram requires careful choices for the arrow lengths and is facilitated by the introduction of the ad hoc macros \cross, \r, and \l. Note also that superscripts were used to adjust the position of the vertices Many diagrams may be typeset with the predefined macros that appear here; however, ingenuity is often required to handle special cases.


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6.2.3 Commutative diagram parameters

The following is a list describing the parameters used in the commutative diagram macros. These dimensions may be changed globally or locally.

\harrowlength

(Default: 60 pt) The length of right or left arrows.

\varrowlength

(Default: 0.618\harrowlength) The length of up or down arrows.

\sarrowlength

(Default: 60 pt) The horizontal length of slanted arrows.

\hmorphposn

(Default: 0 pt) The horizontal position of the morphism with respect to its default position. There are also the dimensions \hmorphposnup, \hmorphposndn, \hmorphposnrt, and \hmorphposnlft for ^/_ or \lft/\rt constructions.

\vmorphposn

(Default: 0 pt) The vertical position of the morphism with respect to its default position. There are also the dimensions \vmorphposnup, \vmorphposndn, \vmorphposnrt, and \vmorphposnlft for ^/_ or \lft/\rt constructions.

\morphdist

(Default: 4 pt) The distance of morphisms from slanted lines or arrows.

\channelwidth

(Default: 3 pt) The distance between double lines or arrows.

\hchannel, \vchannel

(Defaults: 0 pt) Overrides \channelwidth. The horizontal and vertical shifts between double lines or arrows.

\commdiagbaselines

(Default: \baselineskip=15pt \lineskip=3pt \lineskiplimit=3pt ) The parameters used by \commdiag for setting interline glue.

\hgrid

(Default: 15 pt) The horizontal spacing of the grid used by \gridcommdiag.

\vgrid

(Default: 15 pt) The vertical spacing of the grid used by \gridcommdiag.


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7 Programming definitions

The definitions in this section are only likely to be useful when you are writing nontrivial macros, not when writing a document.


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7.1 Category codes

Plain TeX defines \active (as the number 13) for use in changing category codes. Although the author of The TeXbook has “intentionally kept the category codes numeric”, two other categories are commonly used: letters (category code 11) and others (12). Therefore, Eplain defines \letter and \other.

Sometimes it is cleaner to make a character active without actually writing a \catcode command. The \makeactive command takes a character as an argument to make active (and ignores following spaces). For example, here are two commands which both make \ active:

\makeactive\\   \makeactive92

Sometimes you might want to temporarily change the category code of the ‘@’ character to \letter, so that you can use or define macros which are normally inaccessible to the user. For such situations, Eplain provides the \makeatletter command. It sets the category code of ‘@’ to \letter (11) and defines \resetatcatcode to restore the category code to whatever it was before the call to \makeatletter. For example:

\makeatletter
\def\@hidden@macro{This macro cannot normally be
                   called / redefined by the user}
\resetatcatcode

There is also \makeatother which works similarly but sets the category code of ‘@’ to \other (12).

Usually, when you give a definition to an active character, you have to do so inside a group where you temporarily make the character active, and then give it a global definition (cf. the definition of \obeyspaces in The TeXbook). This is inconvenient if you are writing a long macro, or if the character already has a global definition you do not wish to transcend. Eplain provides \letreturn, which defines the usual end-of-line character to be the argument. For example:

\def\mymacro{… \letreturn\myreturn … }
\mymacro hello
there

The end-of-line between ‘hello’ and ‘there’ causes \myreturn to be expanded.

The TeXbook describes \uncatcodespecials, which makes all characters which are normally “special” into “other” characters, but the definition never made it into plain TeX. Eplain therefore defines it. For notes on the usage, see Verbatim listing.

Finally, \percentchar expands into a literal ‘%’ character. This is useful when you \write TeX output to a file, and want to avoid spurious spaces. For example, Eplain writes a \percentchar after the definition of cross-references. The macros \lbracechar and \rbracechar expand similarly.


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7.2 Allocation macros

Plain TeX provides macros that allocate registers of each primitive type in TeX, to prevent different sets of macros from using the same register for two different things. The macros are all named starting with ‘new’, e.g., \newcount allocates a new “count” (integer) register. Such allocations are usually needed only at the top level of some macro definition file; therefore, plain TeX makes the allocation registers \outer, to help find errors. (The error this helps to find is a missing right brace in some macro definition.)

Sometimes, however, it is useful to allocate a register as part of some macro. An outer control sequence cannot be used as part of a macro definition (or in a few other contexts: the parameter text of a definition, an argument to a definition, the preamble of an alignment, or in conditional text that is being skipped). Therefore, Eplain defines “inner” versions of all the allocation macros, named with the prefix ‘inner’: \innernewbox, \innernewcount, \innernewdimen, \innernewfam, \innernewhelp, \innernewif, \innernewinsert, \innernewlanguage, \innernewread,
\innernewskip, \innernewtoks, \innernewwrite.

You can also define non-outer versions of other macros in the same way that Eplain defines the above. The basic macro is called \innerdef:

\innerdef \innername {outername}

The first argument (\innername) to \innerdef is the control sequence that you want to define. Any previous definition of \innername is replaced. The second argument (outername) is the characters in the name of the outer control sequence. (You can’t use the actual control sequence name, since it’s outer!)

If the outer control sequence is named \cs, and you want to define innercs as the inner one, you can use \innerinnerdef, which is just an abbreviation for a call to \innerdef. For example, these two calls are equivalent:

\innerdef\innerproclaim{proclaim}
\innerinnerdef{proclaim}

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7.3 Iteration

You can iterate through a comma-separated list of items with \for. Here is an example:

\for\name:=karl,kathy\do{%
   \message{\name}%
}%

This writes ‘karl’ and ‘kathy’ to the terminal. Spaces before or after the commas in the list, or after the :=, are not ignored. To strip leading spaces off the items, use \For:

\For\name:=
   karl,
   kathy\do{%
      \message{\name}%
   }%

Note that trailing spaces are still not ignored.

Both \for and \For expand the first token of the item list fully, so this is equivalent to the above:

\def\namelist{karl,kathy}%
\for\name:=\namelist\do …

However, this won’t work, either with \for or with \For:

\def\namelist{karl,kathy}%
\For\name:= \namelist\do …

because \for and \For expand the first token after := which is space, not \namelist.

Eplain provides another kind of loops, which is an extension of plain TeX’s \loop. If you say:

\loop
  loop-text
\if condition
  if-text
\repeat

then loop-text will be repeated as long as condition is satisfied (\if can be any of the TeX’s conditional commands, without the matching \fi). Eplain extends this with the optional else clause:

\loop
  loop-text
\if condition
  if-text
\else
  else-text
\repeat

Here, loop-text will be repeated as long as condition is not satisfied. This extension is from Victor Eijkhout’s TeX by Topic (page 104).


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7.4 Macro arguments

It is occasionally useful to redefine a macro that takes arguments to do nothing. Eplain defines \gobble, \gobbletwo, and \gobblethree to swallow one, two, and three arguments, respectively.

For example, if you want to produce a “short” table of contents—one that includes only chapters, say—the easiest thing to do is read the entire .toc file (see Contents), and just ignore the commands that produce section or subsection entries. To be specific:

\let\tocchapterentry = \shorttocchapter
\let\tocsectionentry = \gobbletwo
\let\tocsubsectionentry = \gobbletwo
\readtocfile

(Of course, this assumes you only have chapters, sections, and subsections in your document.)

In addition, Eplain defines \eattoken to swallow the single following token, using \let. Thus, \gobble followed by ‘{…}’ ignores the entire brace-enclosed text. \eattoken followed by the same ignores only the opening left brace.

Eplain defines a macro \identity which takes one argument and expands to that argument. This may be useful if you want to provide a function for the user to redefine, but don’t need to do anything by default. (For example, the default definition of \eqconstruct (see Formatting equation references) is \identity.)

You may also want to read an optional argument. The established convention is that optional arguments are put in square brackets, so that is the syntax Eplain recognizes. Eplain ignores space tokens before and after optional arguments, via \futurenonspacelet.

You test for an optional argument by using \@getoptionalarg. It takes one argument, a control sequence to expand after reading the argument, if present. If an optional argument is present, the control sequence \@optionalarg expands to it; otherwise, \@optionalarg is \empty. You must therefore have the category code of @ set to 11 (letter). Here is an example:

\catcode`@=\letter
\def\cmd{\@getoptionalarg\finishcmd}
\def\finishcmd{%
  \ifx\@optionalarg\empty
    % No optional argument present.
  \else
    % One was present.
  \fi
}

It’s possible to define macros that appear to accept optional arguments intermixed with mandatory arguments in any imaginable way. For example:

\makeatletter
% \mo{m}[o]
\def\mo#1{\def\mo@arg{#1}\@getoptionalarg\fin@mo}
\def\fin@mo{\vskip1pc
  ARG:    \mo@arg       \par
  OPTARG: \@optionalarg \par
}
% \mom{m}[o]{m}
\def\mom#1{\def\mom@arg{#1}\@getoptionalarg\fin@mom}
\def\fin@mom#1{\vskip1pc
  ARG1:   \mom@arg      \par
  OPTARG: \@optionalarg \par
  ARG2:   #1\par
}
% \omo[o]{m}[o]
\def\omo{\@getoptionalarg\fin@omo}
\def\fin@omo#1{\let\omo@optarg\@optionalarg
               \def\omo@arg{#1}\@getoptionalarg\@fin@omo}
\def\@fin@omo{\vskip1pc
  OPTARG1: \omo@optarg   \par
  ARG:     \omo@arg      \par
  OPTARG2: \@optionalarg \par
}
\makeatother

If an optional argument contains another optional argument, the inner one will need to be enclosed in braces, so TeX does not mistake the end of the first for the end of the second.


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7.5 Converting to characters

Eplain defines \xrlabel to produce control sequence names for cross-reference labels, et al. This macro expands to its argument with an ‘_’ appended. (It does this because the usual use of \xrlabel is to generate a control sequence name, and we naturally want to avoid conflicts between control sequence names.)

Because \xrlabel is fully expandable, to make a control sequence name out of the result you need only do

\csname \xrlabel{label}\endcsname

The \csname primitive makes a control sequence name out of any sequence of character tokens, regardless of category code. Labels can therefore include any characters except for ‘\’, ‘{’, ‘}’, and ‘#’, all of which are used in macro definitions themselves.

\sanitize takes a control sequence as an argument and converts the expansion of the control sequence into a list of character tokens. This is the behavior you want when writing information like chapter titles to an output file. For example, here is part of the definition of \writenumberedtocentry; #2 is the title that the user has given.

…
\def\temp{#2}%
…
  \write\tocfile{%
    …
    \sanitize\temp
    …
  }%

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7.6 Expansion

This section describes some miscellanous macros for expansion, etc.


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7.6.1 \csn and \ece

\csn{name} simply abbreviates \csname name \endcsname, thus saving some typing. The extra level of expansion does take some time, though, so I don’t recommend it for an inner loop.

\ece{token}{name} abbreviates

\expandafter token \csname name \endcsname

For example,

\def\fontabbrevdef#1#2{\ece\def{@#1font}{#2}}
\fontabbrevdef{normal}{ptmr}

defines a control sequence \@normalfont to expand to ptmr.


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7.6.2 \edefappend

\edefappend is a way of adding on to an existing definition. It takes two arguments: the first is the control sequence name, the second the new tokens to append to the definition. The second argument is fully expanded (in the \edef that redefines the control sequence).

For example:

\def\foo{abc}
\def\bar{xyz}
\edefappend\foo{\bar karl}

results in \foo being defined as ‘abcxyzkarl’.


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7.6.3 Hooks

A hook is simply a name for a group of actions which is executed in certain places—presumably when it is most useful to allow customization or modification. TeX already provides many builtin hooks; for example, the \every … token lists are all examples of hooks.

Eplain provides several macros for adding actions to hooks. They all take two arguments: the name of the hook and the new actions.

hookaction name actions
hookappend name actions
hookprepend name actions

Each of these adds actions to the hook name. (Any previously-defined actions are retained.) name is not a control sequence, but rather the characters of the name.

hookactiononce name \cs

\hookactiononce adds cs to name, like the macros above, but first it adds

\global\let \cs \relax

to the definition of \cs. (This implies \cs must be a true expandable macro, not a control sequence \let to a primitive or some other such thing.) Thus, \cs is expanded the next time the hook name is run, but it will disappear after that.

The \global is useful because \hookactiononce is most useful when the grouping structure of the TeX code could be anything. Neither this nor the other hook macros do global assignments to the hook variable itself, so TeX’s usual grouping rules apply.

The companion macro to defining hook actions is \hookrun, for running them. This takes a single argument, the name of the hook. If no actions for the hook are defined, no error ensues.

Here is a skeleton of general \begin and \end macros that run hooks, and a couple of calls to define actions. The use of \hookprepend for the begin action and \hookappend for the end action ensures that the actions are executed in proper sequence with other actions (as long as the other actions use \hookprepend and \hookappend also).

\def\begin#1{ … \hookrun{begin} … }
\def\end#1{ … \hookrun{end} … }
\hookprepend{begin}\start_underline
\hookappend{end}\finish_underline

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7.6.4 Properties

A property is a name/value pair associated with another symbol, traditionally called an atom. Both atom and property names are control sequence names.

Eplain provides two macros for dealing with property lists: \setproperty and \getproperty.

\setproperty atom propname value

\setproperty defines the property property on the atom atom to be value. atom and propname can be anything acceptable to \csname. value can be anything.

\getproperty atom propname

\getproperty expands to the value stored for propname on atom. If propname is undefined, it expands to nothing (i.e., \empty).

The idea of properties originated in Lisp (I believe). There, the implementation truly does associate properties with atoms. In TeX, where we have no builtin support for properties, the association is only conceptual.

The following example typesets ‘xyz’.

\setproperty{a}{pr}{xyz}
\getproperty{a}{pr}

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7.6.5 \expandonce

\expandonce is defined as \expandafter\noexpand. Thus, \expandonce token expands token once, instead of to TeX primitives. This is most useful in an \edef.

For example, the following defines \temp to be \foo, not ‘abc’.

\def\foo{abc}
\def\bar{\foo}
\edef\temp{\expandonce\bar}

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7.6.6 \ifundefined

\ifundefined{cs} t \else f \fi expands the t text if the control sequence \cs is undefined or has been \let to \relax, and the f text otherwise.

Since \ifundefined is not a primitive conditional, it cannot be used in places where TeX might skip tokens “at high speed”, e.g., within another conditional—TeX can’t match up the \if’s and \fi’s.

This macro was taken directly from The TeXbook, page 308.


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7.6.7 \ifempty

\ifempty{arg} t \else f \fi expands the t text if arg is the empty string, and the f text otherwise. This macro is useful when you need to test for empty arguments to your macros, for example:

\def\foo#1{\ifempty{#1} t \else f \fi}

Since \ifempty is not a primitive conditional, it cannot be used in places where TeX might skip tokens “at high speed”, e.g., within another conditional—TeX can’t match up the \if’s and \fi’s.

Note that the following code

\def\empty{}
\ifempty\empty\message{empty}\else\message{not empty}\fi

will produce the message ‘not empty’.


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7.6.8 \ifinteger and \isinteger

\ifinteger{arg} t \else f \fi expands the t text if arg is an integer, and the f text otherwise. This macro can detect positive and negative integers.

Since \ifinteger is not a primitive conditional, it cannot be used in places where TeX might skip tokens “at high speed”, e.g., within another conditional—TeX can’t match up the \if’s and \fi’s. For such situations Eplain provides \isinteger, which can be used as follows:

\if\isinteger{arg} t \else f \fi

Although \ifinteger and \isinteger work well with regular input, they are not bullet-proof. For example, the following code

\ifinteger{12_ab}integer\else not integer\fi

will expand to ‘ab_integer’ (and thus would not even compile outside math mode).

These macros come from TeX Frequently Asked Question (http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html).


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7.6.9 \futurenonspacelet

The \futurelet primitive allows you to look at the next token from the input. Sometimes, though, you want to look ahead while ignoring any spaces. This is what \futurenonspacelet does. It is otherwise the same as \futurelet: you give it two control sequences as arguments, and it assigns the next nonspace token to the first, and then expands the second. For example:

\futurenonspacelet\temp\finishup
\def\finishup{\ifx\temp …}

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7.7 Obeying spaces

\obeywhitespace makes both end-of-lines and space characters in the input be respected in the output. Unlike plain TeX’s \obeyspaces, even spaces at the beginnings of lines turn into blank space.

By default, the size of the space that is produced by a space character is the natural space of the current font, i.e., what \ produces.

Ordinarily, a blank line in the input produces as much blank vertical space as a line of text would occupy. You can adjust this by assigning to the parameter \blanklineskipamount: if you set this negative, the space produced by a blank line will be smaller; if positive, larger.

Tabs are not affected by this routine. In particular, if tabs occur at the beginning of a line, they will disappear. (If you are trying to make TeX do the “right thing” with tabs, don’t. Use a utility program like expand instead.)


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7.8 Writing out numbers

\numbername produces the written-out form of its argument, i.e., ‘zero’ through ‘ten’ for the numbers 0–10, and numerals for all others.


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7.9 Mode-specific penalties

TeX’s built-in \penalty command simply appends to the current list, no matter what kind of list it is. You might intend a particular penalty to always be a “vertical” penalty, however, i.e., appended to a vertical list. Therefore, Eplain provides \vpenalty and \hpenalty which first leave the other mode and then do \penalty.

More precisely, \vpenalty inserts \par if the current mode is horizontal, and \hpenalty inserts \leavevmode if the current mode is vertical. (Thus, \vpenalty cannot be used in math mode.)


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7.10 Auxiliary files

It is common to write some information out to a file to be used on a subsequent run. But when it is time to read the file again, you only want to do so if the file actually exists. \testfileexistence is given an argument which is appended to \jobname, and sets the conditional \iffileexists appropriately. For example:

\testfileexistence{toc}%
\iffileexists
   \input \jobname.toc
\fi

\testfileexistence takes an optional parameter; when given, it will override \jobname for the root part of the file name. For example, if you want to test for the file answers.aux, you can do this with the following:

\testfileexistence[answers]{aux}%
\iffileexists
   \input answers.aux
\fi

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7.11 User-defined environments

Plain TeX does not provide “named” block structures, only the anonymous \begingroup and \endgroup pair. The disadvantage of this is that when there are several such groups and one is mismatched, it can be difficult to find the error. Eplain provides a named block structure so that if you forget an \environment or an \endenvironment, you will (probably) get an error message about it.

For example:

\def\itpar{
  \environment{@italicpar}
  \it\par
}
\def\enditpar{
  \par
  \endenvironment{@italicpar}%
}

which could then be used to set italicized paragraphs:

\itpar
If I reprehend anything in this world, it is the use of my oracular
tongue, and a nice derangement of epitaphs! 
\enditpar

The above sort of environment allows nesting. But environments shouldn’t always be allowed to nest. Put the control sequence \checkenv at the beginning of a macro that is going to define an environment that should not be nested.


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7.12 Page list and page range parsers

The macros which Eplain uses to parse the page lists and ranges in the index, \idxparselist and \idxparserange (see Page destinations for index terms), are sometimes useful when defining page number encapsulators. They take one argument, text to parse. When a page list (range) is not present, they set \idxpagei to be \empty; when a list (range) is detected, they set \idxpagei and \idxpageii to the first and the second page numbers, respectively.

Eplain’s defaults for the page list and page range delimiters are the same as those in MakeIndex, a comma followed by a space (‘, ’) and two dashes (‘--’), respectively. If you customize MakeIndex to use different delimiters, you must not forget to let Eplain know about them with the commands

\setidxpagelistdelimiter{list-delim}
\setidxpagerangedelimiter{page-delim}

These commands save the list-delim and page-delim delimiters in \idxpagelistdelimiter and \idxpagerangedelimiter, respectively.

For example, you may want to define a page number markup command which italicizes and properly underlines page ranges by underlining only the page numbers and not the delimiter:

\def\ituline#1{%
  {\it
  \idxparserange{#1}%
  \ifx\idxpagei\empty
    % The argument is a single page number.
    \underbar{#1}%
  \else
    % The argument is a page range.
    \underbar{\idxpagei}\idxpagerangedelimiter\underbar{\idxpageii}%
  \fi}%
}

Note that the \ituline macro is not aware of page lists. This is not needed if you use hyperlinks in the index, because \hlidx and \hlidxpage will break up the page lists before calling the user’s page encapsulator (see Page destinations for index terms), so \ituline will never see the lists. If, however, you need to design a macro which also takes care of the lists, you can extend \ituline with an additional call to \idxparselist.


Next: , Previous: , Up: Top   [Contents][Index]

8 Demo files

This chapter contains listings of source files, along with the output they produce (where appropriate), which illustrate various aspects of Eplain. The files can be found in the demo subdirectory of Eplain distribution. These demos, both the sources and the compiled PDF and PS files, are also available from http://tug.org/eplain/demo.


Next: , Up: Demo files   [Contents][Index]

8.1 Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)

xhyper
% (This file is public domain.)
%
% This file demonstrates the following features of Eplain:
%
%   - explicit and implicit hyperlinks;
%   - symbolic cross-references;
%   - inserting external graphics using |\includegraphics| from
%     the \LaTeX\ package |graphicx.sty|.
%   - rotating text using |\rotatebox| from |graphicx.sty|.
%
% The compiled demo can be downloaded from
%
%   http://tug.org/eplain/demo
%
% In order to compile this file yourself, you will need the CTAN lion
% drawing by Duane Bibby from
%
%   ftp://tug.ctan.org/ftpmaint/CTAN_lion/ctan_lion_350x350.png
%
% (thanks, |www.ctan.org|).  Place the image file in the same
% directory with this file, and change to that directory.  Now, to
% produce a PDF, run twice the command
%
%   pdftex xhyper.tex
%
% During the first run, Eplain will write the information about the
% cross-references into |xhyper.aux|, and during the second run this
% information will be read by Eplain to typeset the references.
%
% Demo case:
%
%   Suppose you are using pdf\TeX, have a figure you want to insert
%   scaled to $200\,pt$ horizontally, and you want this figure to
%   completely fill the PDF viewer's window whenever the reader
%   selects a link pointing to this figure.  Additionally, you want to
%   typeset some text as live hyperlinks, clicking on which will start
%   a Web browser and open a URL.

\input eplain

% Load \LaTeX\ packages.
\beginpackages
  % |url.sty| provides the |\url| command which we will use to typeset
  % a URL.  We request that |url.sty| be the version from June~27,
  % 2005, or later, because earlier versions had problems interacting
  % with plain \TeX.
  \usepackage{url}[2005/06/27]
  % |color.sty| provides support for colored text; all hyperlinks are
  % automatically colored by Eplain when this package is loaded.  We give
  % the |dvipsnames| option because we want to use named colors from the
  % |dvips| graphics driver.
  \usepackage[dvipsnames]{color}
  % Finally, we load |graphicx.sty|, for the macros |\includegraphics|
  % and |\rotatebox|.
  \usepackage{graphicx}
\endpackages

% Remember that hyperlinks are off by default.  Therefore, we need to
% enable them.
\enablehyperlinks

% Customize some hyperlink options.  First, we set border width to~$0$
% for all links to get rid of the default boxes around links (we
% prefer colored links over the boxed links). Next, we say that all
% links created by the |url| hyperlink group (which means the |\url|
% command from |url.sty|) must be colored using the named color
% |BlueViolet|.
\hlopts{bwidth=0}
\hlopts[url]{colormodel=named,color=BlueViolet}

% Inhibit page numbering (we have only one page).
\nopagenumbers

% Define a class word for the cross-reference class |figure|.  This
% word, when defined, will be automatically prepended by Eplain to the
% reference created by |\ref| (read on to see its use).
\def\figureword{fig.}

% Allocate a count register for the figure's number, and a box
% register which we'll use to measure dimensions of the image.
\newcount\fignumber
\newbox\imgbox

% Now comes the fun part--constructing the figure for the image of the
% \CTAN\ lion.  We define a macro
%
%   \fig{LABEL}{FILENAME}{CAPTION}{WIDTH}
%
% which creates a figure using LABEL for the cross-reference and
% hyperlink label, reading the image from file FILENAME, using CAPTION
% to name the figure, and WIDTH to scale the image horizontally.
\def\fig#1#2#3#4{%
  % Leave some space above the figure.  This will also ensure that we
  % are in the vertical mode before we produce a |\vbox|.
  \medskip
  % Advance the figure number.  |\global| ensures that the change to
  % the count register is global, even when |\fig| is buried inside a
  % group.
  \global\advance\fignumber by 1
  % We use |\includegraphics| (from |graphicx.sty|) to load the image,
  % scaled to the specified width, into our ``measuring'' box
  % |\imgbox|.
  \setbox\imgbox = \hbox{\includegraphics[width=#4]{#2}}%
  % To make the demo even more exciting, let's put the figure's
  % caption to the left of the image into the |\indent| space of the
  % new paragraph, and rotate the caption~$90^\circ$.
  \textindent{%
    \rotatebox{90}{F{\sc IGURE}~\the\fignumber.  #3}%
  }%
  % Continue the paragraph by constructing a |\vbox| with the image of
  % the lion.  We use |\definexref| to define the cross-reference
  % label.
  \vbox{%
    % In addition to the cross-reference label, |\definexref| will
    % create a hyperlink destination with the same label.  Therefore,
    % we customize this destination to do what we need.  We say that
    % destination type for the hyperlink group |definexref| (to which
    % |\definexref| belongs) should be |fitr|.  This destination type
    % will magnify the rectangle specified by the options |width|,
    % |height| and |depth| to the PDF viewer's window.  Therefore, we
    % set those options accordingly with |\hldestopts| (notice the use
    % of |depth| instead of |height|---we will want the rectangle to
    % extend {\it downward}, to cover the image which will come
    % next).  Notice that these settings will be isolated within the
    % current group (i.e., the |\vbox| we're constructing).
    \hldesttype[definexref]{fitr}%
    \hldestopts[definexref]{width=\wd\imgbox,height=0pt,depth=\ht\imgbox}%
    % We define a symbolic label so that we can later refer
    % to the figure with |\ref|.  The command |\definexref| does
    % exactly that.  The last argument to |\definexref| specifies
    % class of the label, which determines the word used by |\ref| in
    % front of the reference text (remember that we've defined
    % |\figureword| above).
    \definexref{#1}{\the\fignumber}{figure}%
    % Finally, produce the image which we've been stashing in the box
    % register |\imgbox|.
    \box\imgbox
  }%
  \medskip
}

% Create the figure.
\fig{CTANlion}{ctan_lion_350x350}{Lion in the archives}{200pt}

% Finished with the fun part, we can relax and typeset some
% hyperlinks.  The easiest way to do that is to use the |\ref|
% cross-reference command.  We can even pass an optional argument
% (|the lion in|), which will be placed before the class word (|fig.|)
% and become part of the link (to make sure the reader does not have
% to aim too hard).
Show me \ref[the lion in]{CTANlion}.

% If you are the restless kind, here's another way to create a
% hyperlink to the image:  we create a link explicitly by using
% |\hlstart ... \hlend|.  We don't specify the link type, therefore
% the default type |name| will be used (these are ``named links'',
% i.e., links pointing to destinations identified by labels).  In the
% options argument, we specify that the border of the link should be
% inverted when the user clicks the link (|hlight=O|), and also set
% special color for this link, overriding the default dark-red.  The
% label for the destination is the same as the cross-reference label,
% |CTANlion|.
Show me
\hlstart{}{hlight=O,colormodel=named,color=OliveGreen}{CTANlion}
  the CTAN lion\hlend.

% Let's now point somewhere outside our document.  Eplain homepage is
% a good target.  In the similar spirit, let's consider two
% approaches.  The easy one is to use the |\url| command from
% |url.sty|.  Remember that we have customized the color of |url|
% hyperlinks, so this one will show up with a different color than the
% default dark-red.
Take me to \url{http://tug.org/eplain}.

% The second approach is to create an explicit URL link.  We specify
% yet another border highlighting mode, |P|, which means that the
% region underneath the bounding box of the link will be drawn inset
% into the page.  Also, let's set the color of the hyperlink to an RGB
% color |0.4,0.1,0.4|.  Since we cannot use commas to separate the
% color elements inside the options parameter to |\hlstart| (commas
% there separate options), we have to first create a user-defined
% color with |\definecolor| from |color.sty|, and use that in
% |\hlstart|.
\definecolor{mycolor}{rgb}{0.4,0.1,0.4}

Take me to
\hlstart{url}{hlight=P,colormodel=,color=mycolor}{http://tug.org/eplain}
  Eplain homepage\hlend.

\bye

Previous: , Up: Demo files   [Contents][Index]

8.2 Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)

lscommnt
% (This file is public domain.)
% Demonstrate how Eplain can be used to include a TeX source file
% verbatim, typesetting comments in colored italic typewriter type.

% Load Eplain and LaTeX's color.sty package.
\input eplain
\beginpackages \usepackage{color} \endpackages
\nopagenumbers % Disable page numbers.
\font\commentfont = cmitt10 % Font for the comments (italic \tt).
% We'll define some `protected' macros with `@' in their names.
\makeatletter
% Define an equivalent of Eplain's \letreturn, to be able to assign
% various actions to the (active) percent character.
\begingroup \makeactive\%
  \gdef\letpercent{\let%}
\endgroup
% The listing hook to be called in \setuplistinghook, see below.  It
% makes `%' active and assigns it a `start comment' action.
\def\hlightcommentslisting{\makeactive\% \letpercent\start@comment}%
% This is what `%' is aliased to before a comment is started.
\def\start@comment{%
  \leavevmode % Needed in the very first line of the input to process
              % the new par (possibly inserting line number) before we
              % kick in with the color and stuff.
  \begingroup % Isolate color and font changes and the redefinitions.
    \commentfont
    \color[cmyk]{0.28,1,1,0.35}%
    \percentchar            % Produce the actual `%' and
    \letpercent\percentchar % make all following `%'s do the same.
    \letreturn\end@comment  % Call \end@comment at end-of-line.
}
% \end@comment (alias for ^^M inside a comment) will end the comment
% started by \start@comment.  We make ^^M active temporarily so that
% the active version of ^^M gets "frozen" into \end@comment.
\begingroup \makeactive\^^M % Avoid ^^M's from here on.
  \gdef\end@comment{\endgroup ^^M}%
\endgroup
\resetatcatcode % Make `@' again inaccessible for use in macro names.

% Define \setuplistinghook to setup comments highlighting, line
% numbering and omitting the last (empty) line of input.
\def\setuplistinghook{\hlightcommentslisting \linenumberedlisting
                      \nolastlinelisting}
% Isn't this fun?  This file typesets itself, with the extra bonus of
% the pretty-printed comments and numbered source lines!
\listing{lscommnt}
\bye

Next: , Previous: , Up: Top   [Contents][Index]

Macro index

Jump to:   @  
A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Z  
Index Entry  Section

@
@getoptionalarg: Macro arguments
@hllabel: Destination types for hypertex
@hllabel: Link types for hypertex
@hllabel: Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
@hllabel: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
@indexproof insertion class: Proofing index terms

A
abovecolumnskip: Multiple columns
abovecolumnspenalty: Tables
abovelistpenalty: Formatting lists
abovelistskip: Formatting lists
abovelistskipamount: Formatting lists
adjarrow: Arrows and morphisms
adjmapdown: Arrows and morphisms
adjmapleft: Arrows and morphisms
adjmapright: Arrows and morphisms
adjmapup: Arrows and morphisms
advancebottommargin: Margins
advanceleftmargin: Margins
advancerightmargin: Margins
advancetopmargin: Margins
afterindexterm: Customizing indexing
afterindexterm hook: Indexing commands
AMSLaTeX: Logos
AMSTeX: Logos
arrow: Arrows and morphisms
arrow: Arrows and morphisms

B
bblem: Formatting bibliographies
bblemph: Formatting bibliographies
bblfilebasename: Citations
bblhook: Formatting bibliographies
bblnewblock: Formatting bibliographies
bblrm: Formatting bibliographies
bblsc: Formatting bibliographies
bcolor (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
bdash (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
bdash (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
begin for index entries: Modifying index entries
beginindex hook: Typesetting an index
beginlist: Formatting lists
beginpackages: Environment for loading packages
begin{picture}: Packages known to work
begin{theindex}: Typesetting an index
belowcolumnskip: Multiple columns
belowfootnoterulespace: Footnotes
belowlistskip: Formatting lists
belowlistskipamount: Formatting lists
biarrow: Arrows and morphisms
biblabelcontents: Formatting bibliographies
biblabelextraspace: Formatting bibliographies
biblabelpostcontents: Formatting bibliographies
biblabelprecontents: Formatting bibliographies
biblabelprint: Formatting bibliographies
biblabelwidth: Formatting bibliographies
bibliography: Citations
bibliography (hyperlinks): Citation hyperlinks
bibliographystyle: Citations
BibTeX: Logos
bihline: Arrows and morphisms
bimapdown: Arrows and morphisms
bimapleft: Arrows and morphisms
bimapright: Arrows and morphisms
bimapup: Arrows and morphisms
bisline: Arrows and morphisms
bivline: Arrows and morphisms
blackbox: Boxes
blanklineskipamount in justified text: Justification
blanklineskipamount in obeyed text: Obeying spaces
bottom (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
bottom (destination option): Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
bottommargin: Margins
boxit: Boxes
boxitspace: Boxes
bstyle (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
bwidth (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm

C
catcode: Category codes
center: Justification
centereddisplays: Displays
channelwidth: Arrows and morphisms
channelwidth: Commutative diagram parameters
cite: Citations
cite (hyperlinks): Citation hyperlinks
cmd (destination option): Destination types for hypertex
cmd (destination option): Destination options for hypertex
cmd (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
cmd (destination option): Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
cmd (hyperlink option): Link types for hypertex
cmd (hyperlink option): Link options for hypertex
cmd (hyperlink option): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
cmd (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
color (hyperlink option): Options supported by all drivers
colormodel (hyperlink option): Options supported by all drivers
columnfill: Multiple columns
commdiag: Construction of commutative diagrams
commdiagbaselines: Construction of commutative diagrams
commdiagbaselines: Commutative diagram parameters
csn: \csn and \ece

D
definecolor: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
definecontentsfile: Alternative contents files
defineindex: Indexing
definexref: Defining generic references
definexref: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
definexref (hyperlinks): Cross-reference hyperlinks
depth (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
depth (destination option): Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
depth (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
discretionaries: Paths
displaylines: Displays
dospecials: Verbatim listing
doublecolumns: Multiple columns
drawline: Slanted lines and vectors
drawvector: Slanted lines and vectors
dvipdfm (hyperlink driver): Hyperlink drivers pdftex and dvipdfm

E
eattoken: Macro arguments
ece: \csn and \ece
edefappend: \edefappend
ehrule: Rules
em: Commands from LaTeX
emph: Commands from LaTeX
enablehyperlinks: Introduction to hyperlinks
enablehyperlinks: Choosing destination placement
enablehyperlinks: Hyperlink driver nolinks
end for index entries: Modifying index entries
endlist: Formatting lists
endnumberedlist: Lists
endorderedlist: Lists
endpackages: Environment for loading packages
endunorderedlist: Lists
end{picture}: Packages known to work
end{theindex}: Typesetting an index
eplain: Invoking Eplain
eplaininput: Environment for loading packages
eqalignno: Displays
eqalignno: Displays
eqalignnum: Displays
eqconstruct: Formatting equation references
eqdef: Equation references
eqdef (hyperlinks): Equation reference hyperlinks
eqdefn: Equation references
eqdefn (hyperlinks): Equation reference hyperlinks
eqno: Displays
eqnum: Displays
eqnum: Equation references
eqnum: Equation references
eqnumber: Equation references
eqprint: Formatting equation references
eqref: Equation references
eqref: Equation reference hyperlinks
eqrefn: Equation references
eqrefn: Equation reference hyperlinks
eqsubdef: Subequation references
eqsubdef (hyperlinks): Equation reference hyperlinks
eqsubdefn: Subequation references
eqsubdefn (hyperlinks): Equation reference hyperlinks
eqsubreftext: Subequation references
eTeX: Logos
everyfootnote: Footnotes
evrule: Rules
expandonce: \expandonce
ext (hyperlink option): Link types for hypertex
ext (hyperlink option): Link options for hypertex
ExTeX: Logos

F
file (hyperlink option): Link types for hypertex
file (hyperlink option): Link options for hypertex
file (hyperlink option): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
file (hyperlink option): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
file (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
fileexists (conditional): Auxiliary files
filename (hyperlink type): Link types for hypertex
filename (hyperlink type): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
filepage (hyperlink type): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
fit (destination type): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
fitb (destination type): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
fitbh (destination type): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
fitbv (destination type): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
fith (destination type): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
fitr (destination type): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
fitv (destination type): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
flushleft: Justification
flushright: Justification
fmtversion: Introduction
footnote (hyperlinks): Footnote hyperlinks
footnotemarkseparation: Footnotes
footnoteruleheight: Footnotes
footnoterulewidth: Footnotes
for: Iteration
For: Iteration
frac: Fractions
fullmonthname: Time of day
futurenonspacelet: \futurenonspacelet

G
getproperty: Properties
gloggingall: Diagnostics
gobble: Macro arguments
gobbletwo: Macro arguments
gridcommdiag: Construction of commutative diagrams
gtracingall: Diagnostics
gutter: Multiple columns
gutterbox: Multiple columns

H
hangindent for index entries: Typesetting an index
harrowlength: Arrows and morphisms
harrowlength: Commutative diagram parameters
hchannel: Commutative diagram parameters
height (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
height (destination option): Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
height (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hgrid: Construction of commutative diagrams
hgrid: Commutative diagram parameters
hldest: Explicit hyperlinks
hldest: Destination types for hypertex
hldest: Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
hldest: Setting hyperlink types and options
hldestoff: Hyperlink driver nolinks
hldestoff: Turning low-level commands on/off
hldeston: Turning low-level commands on/off
hldestopts: Setting default types and options
hldestopts: Setting group options
hldestopts: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
hldesttype: Setting default types and options
hldesttype: Setting group types
hldesttype: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
hlend: Explicit hyperlinks
hlend: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
hlfootbacklabel: Footnote hyperlinks
hlfootlabel: Footnote hyperlinks
hlfootlabelnumber: Footnote hyperlinks
hlhash: Link types for hypertex
hlidx: Exact destinations for index terms
hlidxlabel: Exact destinations for index terms
hlidxlabelnumber: Exact destinations for index terms
hlidxpage: Page destinations for index terms
hlidxpagelabel: Page destinations for index terms
hlight (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hlightcommentslisting: Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)
hline: Arrows and morphisms
hloff: Hyperlink driver nolinks
hloff: Turning low-level commands on/off
hlon: Turning low-level commands on/off
hlopts: Setting default types and options
hlopts: Setting group options
hlopts: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
hlstart: Explicit hyperlinks
hlstart: Link types for hypertex
hlstart: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
hlstart: Setting hyperlink types and options
hlstart: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
hltype: Setting default types and options
hltype: Setting group types
hmorphposn: Arrows and morphisms
hmorphposn: Commutative diagram parameters
hmorphposndn: Arrows and morphisms
hmorphposndn: Commutative diagram parameters
hmorphposnlft: Arrows and morphisms
hmorphposnlft: Commutative diagram parameters
hmorphposnrt: Arrows and morphisms
hmorphposnrt: Commutative diagram parameters
hmorphposnup: Arrows and morphisms
hmorphposnup: Commutative diagram parameters
hoffset: Proofing index terms
hookaction: Hooks
hookactiononce: Hooks
hookappend: Hooks
hookprepend: Hooks
hookrun: Hooks
href: General hyperlinks
hruledefaultdepth: Rules
hruledefaultheight: Rules
hsize: Margins
hypertex (hyperlink driver): Hyperlink driver hypertex
hyphenpenalty for index entries: Typesetting an index

I
identity: Macro arguments
idx: Indexing commands
idx (hyperlinks): Index hyperlinks
idxargclose: Index entries with special characters
idxargopen: Index entries with special characters
idxbeginrangemark: Customizing indexing
idxencapoperator: Customizing indexing
idxendrangemark: Customizing indexing
idxexact: Choosing destination placement
idxmarked: Indexing commands
idxmarked (hyperlinks): Index hyperlinks
idxname: Indexing commands
idxname (hyperlinks): Index hyperlinks
idxnameseparator: Indexing commands
idxnone: Choosing destination placement
idxpage: Choosing destination placement
idxpagei: Page list and page range parsers
idxpageii: Page list and page range parsers
idxpagelistdelimiter: Page list and page range parsers
idxpagenum: Customizing indexing
idxpagerangedelimiter: Page list and page range parsers
idxpagerangedelimiter: Page list and page range parsers
idxparselist: Page list and page range parsers
idxparserange: Page list and page range parsers
idxrangebeginword: Customizing indexing
idxrangeendword: Customizing indexing
idxseealsocmdword: Customizing indexing
idxseecmdword: Customizing indexing
idxsubentryseparator: Customizing indexing
idxsubmarked: Indexing commands
idxsubmarked (hyperlinks): Index hyperlinks
ifempty: \ifempty
iffileexists: Auxiliary files
ifidx: Indexing
ifindexproofing: Proofing index terms
ifinteger: \ifinteger and \isinteger
ifpdf: Checking for PDF output
ifpdf: Introduction to hyperlinks
ifrewritetocfile: Reading the .toc file
ifundefined: \ifundefined
includegraphics: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
indexfilebasename: Typesetting an index
indexfonts: Typesetting an index
indexitem hook: Typesetting an index
indexprooffont: Proofing index terms
indexproofingfalse: Proofing index terms
indexproofingtrue: Proofing index terms
indexproofterm: Proofing index terms
indexproofunbox: Proofing index terms
indexsee: Customizing indexing
indexsee: Hyperlinks in see and see also entries
indexseealso: Customizing indexing
indexseealso: Hyperlinks in see and see also entries
indexseealsowords: Customizing indexing
indexseeword: Customizing indexing
indexsetmargins: Proofing index terms
indexspace: Typesetting an index
innerdef: Allocation macros
innerinnerdef: Allocation macros
innernewbox: Allocation macros
innernewcount: Allocation macros
innernewdimen: Allocation macros
innernewfam: Allocation macros
innernewhelp: Allocation macros
innernewif: Allocation macros
innernewinsert: Allocation macros
innernewlanguage: Allocation macros
innernewread: Allocation macros
innernewskip: Allocation macros
innernewtoks: Allocation macros
innernewwrite: Allocation macros
input: Environment for loading packages
insidemargin: Proofing index terms
interfootnoteskip: Footnotes
interitemskip: Formatting lists
interitemskipamount: Formatting lists
isinteger: \ifinteger and \isinteger
item in indexes: Typesetting an index
itemletter: Formatting lists
itemnumber: Formatting lists
ituline: Page list and page range parsers

J
jobname: Citations
jobname: Typesetting an index
jobname: Auxiliary files

L
LAMSTeX: Logos
LaTeX: Logos
lbracechar: Category codes
left (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
left (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
left (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
left (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
left (destination option): Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
leftdisplayindent: Displays
leftdisplays: Displays
leftdisplaysetup: Formatting displays
lefteqnumbers: Displays
leftmargin: Margins
leqalignno: Displays
leqalignno: Displays
leqno: Displays
letreturn: Category codes
letter: Category codes
lft: Arrows and morphisms
li: Lists
li (hyperlinks): List hyperlinks
linenumberedlisting: Verbatim listing
linenumberedlisting: Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)
listcompact: Lists
listing: Verbatim listing
listing: Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)
listingfont: Verbatim listing
listleftindent: Formatting lists
listmarkerspace: Formatting lists
listrightindent: Formatting lists
loggingall: Diagnostics
loop: Iteration

M
makeactive: Category codes
makeatletter: Category codes
makeatother: Category codes
makeblankbox: Boxes
makecolumns: Tables
makeheadline: Proofing index terms
mapdown: Arrows and morphisms
mapdown: Arrows and morphisms
mapleft: Arrows and morphisms
mapleft: Arrows and morphisms
mapright: Arrows and morphisms
mapright: Arrows and morphisms
mapup: Arrows and morphisms
mapup: Arrows and morphisms
matrix: Construction of commutative diagrams
mbox: Commands from LaTeX
MF: Logos
monthname: Time of day
morphdist: Arrows and morphisms
morphdist: Commutative diagram parameters

N
name (hyperlink type): Link types for hypertex
name (hyperlink type): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
new…: Allocation macros
newblock: Commands from LaTeX
newcommand: Commands from LaTeX
newwin (hyperlink option): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
newwin (hyperlink option): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
newwin (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
noarrow: Invoking Eplain
noauxfile: Invoking Eplain
nobibtex: Invoking Eplain
nocite: Citations
nolastlinelisting: Verbatim listing
nolastlinelisting: Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)
nolinks (hyperlink driver): Hyperlink driver nolinks
normalbaselineskip: Options supported by all drivers
num (hyperlink type): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
numberedfootnote: Footnotes
numberedfootnote (hyperlinks): Footnote hyperlinks
numberedlist: Lists
numberedlistdepth: Formatting lists
numberedmarker: Formatting lists
numbername: Writing out numbers

O
obeywhitespace: Obeying spaces
orderedlist: Lists
other: Category codes
outer: Allocation macros
outsidemargin: Proofing index terms

P
page (hyperlink type): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
pagefit (hyperlink option): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
pagefit (hyperlink option): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
pagefit (hyperlink option): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
pagefit (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
pageno: Proofing index terms
pagetotal: Multiple columns
paperheight: Margins
paperwidth: Margins
parindent in indexes: Typesetting an index
path: Paths
pdfoutput: Checking for PDF output
pdftex (hyperlink driver): Hyperlink drivers pdftex and dvipdfm
percentchar: Category codes
phantomeqlabel: Equation reference hyperlinks
phantomeqnumber: Equation reference hyperlinks
previouseverydisplay: Formatting displays
printbetweencitations: Formatting citations
printcitefinish: Formatting citations
printcitenote: Formatting citations
printcitestart: Formatting citations
printitem: Formatting lists
printlistinglineno: Verbatim listing
printlistinglineno: Verbatim listing
providecommand: Commands from LaTeX

Q
quadcolumns: Multiple columns

R
raggedright for index entries: Typesetting an index
raise (hyperlink option): Options supported by all drivers
raise (hyperlink option): Setting group options
raw (destination type): Destination types for hypertex
raw (destination type): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
raw (hyperlink type): Link types for hypertex
raw (hyperlink type): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
rbracechar: Category codes
readindexfile: Typesetting an index
readindexfile (hyperlinks): Index hyperlinks
readtocfile: Reading the .toc file
ref: Using generic references
ref: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
ref (hyperlinks): Cross-reference hyperlinks
refn: Using generic references
refn (hyperlinks): Cross-reference hyperlinks
refs: Using generic references
refs (hyperlinks): Cross-reference hyperlinks
refspace: Cross-reference hyperlinks
refspace: Page reference hyperlinks
reftie: Cross-reference hyperlinks
reftie: Cross-reference hyperlinks
reftie: Equation reference hyperlinks
renewcommand: Commands from LaTeX
repeat: Iteration
resetatcatcode: Environment for loading packages
resetatcatcode: Category codes
rewritetocfile (conditional): Reading the .toc file
right (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
right (destination option): Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
righteqnumbers: Displays
rightmargin: Margins
rotatebox: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
rt: Arrows and morphisms

S
sanitize: Converting to characters
sarrowlength: Arrows and morphisms
sarrowlength: Commutative diagram parameters
sc: Commands from LaTeX
see for index entries: Modifying index entries
see for index entries: Customizing indexing
seealso for index entries: Modifying index entries
seevariant: Customizing indexing
setidxpagelistdelimiter: Page list and page range parsers
setidxpagerangedelimiter: Page list and page range parsers
setproperty: Properties
setuplistinghook: Verbatim listing
setuplistinghook: Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)
sidx: Indexing commands
sidxmarked: Indexing commands
sidxname: Indexing commands
sidxsubmarked: Indexing commands
singlecolumn: Multiple columns
sline: Arrows and morphisms
sline: Arrows and morphisms
SLiTeX: Logos
special: Introduction to hyperlinks
specialpathdelimiters (conditional): Paths
subeqnumber: Subequation references
subitem in indexes: Typesetting an index
subsubitem in indexes: Typesetting an index

T
testfileexistence: Auxiliary files
TeX: Logos
textbf: Commands from LaTeX
timestamp: Time of day
timestring: Time of day
toc…entry: Writing the .toc file
toc…entry: Writing the .toc file
tocfilebasename: Changing the .toc file's root name
today: Time of day
top (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
top (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
top (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
top (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
top (destination option): Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
topmargin: Margins
tracingall: Diagnostics
tracingboxes: Diagnostics
tracingoff: Diagnostics
triplecolumns: Multiple columns
tt: Packages known to work
ttfamily: Packages known to work

U
uncatcodespecials: Verbatim listing
uncatcodespecials: Category codes
unorderedlist: Lists
unorderedlistdepth: Formatting lists
unorderedmarker: Formatting lists
url: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
url (hyperlink type): Link types for hypertex
url (hyperlink type): Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
url (hyperlinks): URL hyperlinks
usepackage: The \usepackage command

V
varrowlength: Arrows and morphisms
varrowlength: Commutative diagram parameters
vchannel: Commutative diagram parameters
verbatim: Verbatim listing
verbatimescapechar: Verbatim listing
vgrid: Construction of commutative diagrams
vgrid: Commutative diagram parameters
vline: Arrows and morphisms
vmorphposn: Arrows and morphisms
vmorphposn: Commutative diagram parameters
vmorphposndn: Arrows and morphisms
vmorphposndn: Commutative diagram parameters
vmorphposnlft: Arrows and morphisms
vmorphposnlft: Commutative diagram parameters
vmorphposnrt: Arrows and morphisms
vmorphposnrt: Commutative diagram parameters
vmorphposnup: Arrows and morphisms
vmorphposnup: Commutative diagram parameters
vpenalty: Mode-specific penalties
vruledefaultwidth: Rules

W
width (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
width (destination option): Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
width (hyperlink option): Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
writenumberedtocentry: Writing the .toc file
writenumberedtocline: Writing the .toc file
writetocentry: Writing the .toc file

X
XeLaTeX: Logos
XeTeX: Logos
xrdef: Page references
xrdef (hyperlinks): Page reference hyperlinks
xref: Page references
xref (hyperlinks): Page reference hyperlinks
xrefn: Using generic references
xrefn (hyperlinks): Cross-reference hyperlinks
xrefpageword: Page references
xrefpageword: Page reference hyperlinks
xrefwarning conditional: Using generic references
xrefwarningfalse: Citations
xrlabel: Converting to characters
xyz (destination type): Destination types for hypertex
xyz (destination type): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm

Z
zoom (destination option): Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
zoom (destination option): Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm

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Concept index

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Index Entry  Section

*
*-form of LaTeX commands: Commands from LaTeX

.
.aux file: Citations
.aux file: Cross-references
.bbl file: Citations
.bib file: Citations
.bst files: Citations
.cls files: Loading LaTeX packages
.eps files: Packages known to work
.eps files: Packages known to work
.fmt file: Installation
.fmt file: Invoking Eplain
.idx files: Indexing
.idx files: Index hyperlinks
.ind files: Indexing
.ind files: Index hyperlinks
.pdf files: Checking for PDF output
.pdf files: Packages known to work
.pdf files: Introduction to hyperlinks
.ps files: Introduction to hyperlinks
.sty files: Loading LaTeX packages
.toc file: Contents

A
active characters: Category codes
after index terms: Customizing indexing
alignments: Tables
all groups, specifying: Setting group types
allocation macros: Allocation macros
alphanumeric references: Citations
AMSLaTeX: Logos
amsppt.sty: Invoking Eplain
AMSTeX: Logos
AMSTeX conflicts: Invoking Eplain
arguments, ignoring: Macro arguments
arrows: Arrows and morphisms
atom: Properties
autopict.sty: Packages known to work
avoiding boxed links: URL hyperlinks
avoiding boxed links: Setting default types and options
axuiliary files, existence of: Auxiliary files

B
backslash character: Category codes
balancing of columns with \singlecolumn: Multiple columns
Berry, Karl: Introduction
beveled hyperlink border: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
bibliographies: Citations
bibliography fonts: Formatting bibliographies
bibliography items, extra space between: Formatting bibliographies
bibliography, formatting the: Formatting bibliographies
bibliography, hyperlinks: Citation hyperlinks
bibtex: Invoking Eplain
BibTeX: Citations
BibTeX: Logos
black boxes: Boxes
Borceux, Francis: Construction of commutative diagrams
border color, hyperlink: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
border style, hyperlink: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
border style, hyperlink: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
border width, hyperlink: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
Bott, Raoul: Construction of commutative diagrams
boxed links, avoiding: URL hyperlinks
boxed links, avoiding: Setting default types and options
boxes, open: Boxes
braces, inside index entries: Index entries with special characters
brackets, inside index entries: Index entries with special characters
Brockett, Roger W.: Construction of commutative diagrams
Butterfly Lemma: Construction of commutative diagrams

C
Carlisle, David: Loading LaTeX packages
catcode of ‘@: Environment for loading packages
category codes: Category codes
centering: Justification
characters, converting to: Converting to characters
characters, special: Verbatim listing
citations: Citations
citations, formatting: Formatting citations
citations, hyperlinks: Citation hyperlinks
citations, undefined: Citations
cmtt8: Proofing index terms
color: Packages known to work
color, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
color, hyperlink border: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
color, hyperlinks: URL hyperlinks
color, hyperlinks: Options supported by all drivers
color, hyperlinks: Setting default types and options
color, problems with pdfTeX: Packages known to work
color.sty: Packages known to work
color.sty: URL hyperlinks
color.sty: Hyperlink driver nolinks
color.sty: Setting default types and options
color.sty: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
colored links: URL hyperlinks
colored links: Options supported by all drivers
colored links: Setting default types and options
column balancing with \singlecolumn: Multiple columns
column eject: Multiple columns
commas after index terms: Customizing indexing
commas in cross-referencing index entries: Customizing indexing
comments, highlighting in listings: Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)
commutative diagrams: Commutative diagrams
contents: Contents
contents, and verbatim text: Writing the .toc file
contents, hyperlinks: Contents hyperlinks
ConTeXt: Packages known to work
continued index entries: Typesetting an index
covering homotopy property: Construction of commutative diagrams
cross-references: Cross-references
cross-references, defining general: Defining generic references
cross-references, defining general: Using generic references
cross-references, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
cross-references, hyperlinks: Cross-reference hyperlinks
cross-referencing index entries: Modifying index entries
cross-referencing index entries: Customizing indexing
CTRL-L, and verbatim listing: Verbatim listing
cube: Construction of commutative diagrams
customizing indexing: Customizing indexing

D
dashed hyperlink border: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dashed hyperlink border: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
date: Time of day
default hyperlink options: Setting hyperlink types and options
default hyperlink options: Setting group types
default hyperlink type: Setting hyperlink types and options
default hyperlink type: Setting group types
defining general references: Defining generic references
defining general references: Using generic references
definitions, global: Category codes
demo files: Demo files
destgroup: Implicit hyperlinks
destgroup options: Setting hyperlink types and options
destgroup options: Setting group options
destgroup options, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
destgroup type: Setting hyperlink types and options
destgroup type: Setting group types
destgroup type, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
destgroup ‘bib’: Citation hyperlinks
destgroup ‘definexref’: Cross-reference hyperlinks
destgroup ‘eq’: Equation reference hyperlinks
destgroup ‘foot’: Footnote hyperlinks
destgroup ‘footback’: Footnote hyperlinks
destgroup ‘idx’: Index hyperlinks
destgroup ‘li’: List hyperlinks
destgroup ‘xrdef’: Page reference hyperlinks
destination group: Implicit hyperlinks
destination options: Introduction to hyperlinks
destination options, common: Options supported by all drivers
destination options, dvipdfm: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
destination options, hypertex: Destination options for hypertex
destination options, pdftex: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
destination type: Introduction to hyperlinks
destination types, dvipdfm: Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
destination types, hypertex: Destination types for hypertex
destination types, pdftex: Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, default options: Setting hyperlink types and options
destinations, default options: Setting group types
destinations, default type: Setting hyperlink types and options
destinations, default type: Setting group types
destinations, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, disabling: Hyperlink driver nolinks
destinations, disabling: Turning hyperlinks on/off
destinations, group options: Setting hyperlink types and options
destinations, group options: Setting group options
destinations, group options, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
destinations, group type: Setting hyperlink types and options
destinations, group type: Setting group types
destinations, group type, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
destinations, in another file: Link types for hypertex
destinations, in another file: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, in another file: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, large operators: Options supported by all drivers
destinations, large operators: Setting group options
destinations, magnification: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, named: Link types for hypertex
destinations, named: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, numbered: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, page: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
destinations, raising: Options supported by all drivers
destinations, URL: Link types for hypertex
destinations, URL: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
detecting numbers: \ifinteger and \isinteger
diagnostics: Diagnostics
Diagram, macros for LaTeX: Construction of commutative diagrams
dimensions, hyperlink: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dimensions, hyperlink: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dimensions, hyperlink: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dimensions, hyperlink destination: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dimensions, hyperlink destination: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dimensions, hyperlink destination: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dimensions, hyperlink destination: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dimensions, hyperlink destination: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dimensions, hyperlink destination: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dimensions, hyperlink destination: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
disabling hyperlinks: Hyperlink driver nolinks
disabling hyperlinks: Turning hyperlinks on/off
disabling indexes: Indexing
displayed math and hyperlinks: Options supported by all drivers
displayed math and hyperlinks: Setting group options
displays, left-justifying: Displays
do…while loops: Iteration
double column output: Multiple columns
double columns in indexes: Typesetting an index
draft, option for graphics.sty: Packages known to work
driver dvipdfm: Hyperlink drivers pdftex and dvipdfm
driver hypertex: Hyperlink driver hypertex
driver nolinks: Hyperlink driver nolinks
driver pdftex: Hyperlink drivers pdftex and dvipdfm
drivers, hyperlink: Introduction to hyperlinks
dvipdfm: Introduction to hyperlinks
dvipdfm: Hyperlink driver hypertex
dvipdfm: Hyperlink driver hypertex
dvipdfm, destination options: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dvipdfm, destination types: Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
dvipdfm, hyperlink driver: Hyperlink drivers pdftex and dvipdfm
dvipdfm, link options: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
dvipdfm, link types: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
dvips: Hyperlink driver hypertex
dvips: Hyperlink driver hypertex

E
Eijkhout, Victor: Iteration
eject in multicolumns: Multiple columns
electronic mail addresses, breaking: Paths
electronic mail addresses, breaking: Packages known to work
empty argument, checking for: \ifempty
empty equation labels: Equation references
empty equation labels, referring to: Equation references
empty string, checking for: \ifempty
Encapsulated PostScript: Packages known to work
Encapsulated PostScript: Packages known to work
environments, user-defined: User-defined environments
Eplain, installing: Installation
Eplain, invoking: Invoking Eplain
Eplain, purpose of: Introduction
Eplain, upgrading: Installation
eplain.aux: Installation
eplain.fmt: Installation
EPS: Packages known to work
EPS: Packages known to work
epstopdf: Packages known to work
epstopdf.sty: Packages known to work
equation labels, characters valid in: Equation references
equation numbers, formatting of: Formatting equation references
equation numbers, left-alignment: Displays
equations, giving numbers to all: Equation references
equations, groups of: Subequation references
equations, hyperlinks: Equation reference hyperlinks
equations, numbering: Equation references
equations, references to: Equation references
error messages: Diagnostics
error on \input: Environment for loading packages
escape character, changing verbatim: Verbatim listing
eTeX: Logos
exact index hyperlinks: Exact destinations for index terms
expansion, one-level: \expandonce
explicit hyperlinks: Explicit hyperlinks
explicit hyperlinks, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
ExTeX: Logos

F
file, hyperlink to: Link types for hypertex
file, hyperlink to: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
file, hyperlink to: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
file:’ links: General hyperlinks
filenames, breaking: Paths
filenames, breaking: Packages known to work
files, verbatim listing of: Verbatim listing
files, verbatim listing of, demo: Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)
filtering index entries with hyperlinks: Exact destinations for index terms
footnotes, hyperlinks: Footnote hyperlinks
footnotes, numbered: Footnotes
for loops: Iteration
form feed character, and verbatim listing: Verbatim listing
format file: Installation
formatting index entries: Typesetting an index
fractions: Fractions

G
Ghostscript: Hyperlink driver hypertex
Ghostscript: Hyperlink driver hypertex
gobbling arguments: Macro arguments
golden mean: Construction of commutative diagrams
golden mean: Construction of commutative diagrams
Graham, Ronald L.: Citations
graphics collection, LaTeX: Loading LaTeX packages
graphics collection, LaTeX: Packages known to work
graphics collection, LaTeX: Hyperlink driver nolinks
graphics collection, LaTeX, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
graphics, omitting typesetting of: Packages known to work
graphics, problems with pdfTeX: Packages known to work
graphics.sty: Packages known to work
graphicx.sty: Packages known to work
graphicx.sty: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
grid: Construction of commutative diagrams
group option list: Setting group options
group options, hyperlink: Setting hyperlink types and options
group options, hyperlink: Setting group options
group options, hyperlink, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
group type, hyperlink: Setting hyperlink types and options
group type, hyperlink: Setting group types
group type, hyperlink, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
group ‘’ (empty): Setting group types
group ‘*’: Setting group types
group ‘bib’: Citation hyperlinks
group ‘cite’: Citation hyperlinks
group ‘definexref’: Cross-reference hyperlinks
group ‘eq’: Equation reference hyperlinks
group ‘eq’: Equation reference hyperlinks
group ‘eq’: Setting group options
group ‘foot’: Footnote hyperlinks
group ‘footback’: Footnote hyperlinks
group ‘hrefext’: General hyperlinks
group ‘hrefint’: General hyperlinks
group ‘idx’: Index hyperlinks
group ‘li’: List hyperlinks
group ‘ref’: Cross-reference hyperlinks
group ‘url’: URL hyperlinks
group ‘xrdef’: Page reference hyperlinks
group ‘xref’: Page reference hyperlinks
group, destination: Implicit hyperlinks
group, disabling hyperlinks: Turning hyperlinks on/off for a group
group, link: Implicit hyperlinks
group, preserving option list: Setting group options
groups, specifying all: Setting group types

H
hanging on \input: Environment for loading packages
help messages: Diagnostics
highlight modes, hyperlink: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
highlighting: Packages known to work
highlighting, in listings: Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)
Höppner, Klaus: Packages known to work
hooks: Hooks
hyperlink border color: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink color: URL hyperlinks
hyperlink color: Options supported by all drivers
hyperlink color: Setting default types and options
hyperlink destination, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink destination, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink destination, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink destination, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink destination, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink destination, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink destination, dimensions: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink destination, magnification: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink destination, named: Link types for hypertex
hyperlink destination, named: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink destination, numbered: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink destination, page: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink destination, raising: Options supported by all drivers
hyperlink dimensions: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink dimensions: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink dimensions: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink driver dvipdfm: Hyperlink drivers pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink driver hypertex: Hyperlink driver hypertex
hyperlink driver nolinks: Hyperlink driver nolinks
hyperlink driver pdftex: Hyperlink drivers pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlink drivers: Introduction to hyperlinks
hyperlink group, disabling hyperlinks: Turning hyperlinks on/off for a group
hyperlink group, preserving option list: Setting group options
hyperlink options, common: Options supported by all drivers
hyperlinks, bibliography: Citation hyperlinks
hyperlinks, border style: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlinks, border style: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlinks, border width: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlinks, citations: Citation hyperlinks
hyperlinks, cross-references: Cross-reference hyperlinks
hyperlinks, default options: Setting hyperlink types and options
hyperlinks, default options: Setting group types
hyperlinks, default type: Setting hyperlink types and options
hyperlinks, default type: Setting group types
hyperlinks, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
hyperlinks, disabling: Hyperlink driver nolinks
hyperlinks, disabling: Turning hyperlinks on/off
hyperlinks, equations: Equation reference hyperlinks
hyperlinks, explicit: Explicit hyperlinks
hyperlinks, explicit, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
hyperlinks, filtering index entries: Exact destinations for index terms
hyperlinks, footnotes: Footnote hyperlinks
hyperlinks, group option list: Setting group options
hyperlinks, group options: Setting hyperlink types and options
hyperlinks, group options: Setting group options
hyperlinks, group options, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
hyperlinks, group type: Setting hyperlink types and options
hyperlinks, group type: Setting group types
hyperlinks, highlight mode: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlinks, implicit: Implicit hyperlinks
hyperlinks, implicit, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
hyperlinks, index: Index hyperlinks
hyperlinks, index destination placement: Choosing destination placement
hyperlinks, index, exact: Exact destinations for index terms
hyperlinks, large operators: Options supported by all drivers
hyperlinks, large operators: Setting group options
hyperlinks, lists: List hyperlinks
hyperlinks, opening in a new window: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlinks, page references: Page reference hyperlinks
hyperlinks, preserving page-breaking: Hyperlink driver nolinks
hyperlinks, preserving spacing: Hyperlink driver nolinks
hyperlinks, see and see also index entries: Hyperlinks in see and see also entries
hyperlinks, table of contents: Contents hyperlinks
hyperlinks, to another file: Link types for hypertex
hyperlinks, to another file: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlinks, to another file: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperlinks, URL: General hyperlinks
hyperlinks, URL: URL hyperlinks
hyperlinks, URL: Link types for hypertex
hyperlinks, URL: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
hyperref.sty: Packages known not to work
hypertex, destination options: Destination options for hypertex
hypertex, destination types: Destination types for hypertex
hypertex, hyperlink driver: Hyperlink driver hypertex
hypertex, link options: Link options for hypertex
hypertex, link types: Link types for hypertex
hypertext links: Hyperlinks

I
identifying numbers: \ifinteger and \isinteger
idxuniq: Exact destinations for index terms
ignoring arguments: Macro arguments
implicit hyperlinks: Implicit hyperlinks
implicit hyperlinks, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
inaccessible macros: Category codes
index entries and ranges: Modifying index entries
index entries containing braces: Index entries with special characters
index entries containing brackets: Index entries with special characters
index entries with special characters: Index entries with special characters
index entries’ page numbers, modifying: Modifying index entries
index entries, and cross-referencing: Modifying index entries
index entries, and cross-referencing: Customizing indexing
index entries, proofing: Proofing index terms
index entries, with verbatim text: Index entries with special characters
index entry continuations: Typesetting an index
index entry formatting: Typesetting an index
index entry general sorting: Indexing commands
index fonts: Typesetting an index
index groupings: Typesetting an index
index hyperlink: Index hyperlinks
index typesetting: Typesetting an index
index, and verbatim text: Index entries with special characters
index, choosing destination placement: Choosing destination placement
index, destination placement: Choosing destination placement
index, exact hyperlinks: Exact destinations for index terms
index, hyperlinks in see and see also entries: Hyperlinks in see and see also entries
index, parsing page numbers: Page destinations for index terms
index, placement of destinations: Choosing destination placement
index, selecting destination placement: Choosing destination placement
index, underlining page numbers: Page list and page range parsers
indexes, disabling: Indexing
indexes, multiple: Indexing
indexing: Indexing
indexing and trailing spaces: Indexing terms
indexing commands: Indexing commands
indexing terms: Indexing terms
insertion classes: Multiple columns
inset hyperlink border: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
installation: Installation
integers, detecting: \ifinteger and \isinteger
italic correction: Formatting bibliographies
item labels, changing: Formatting lists
iteration: Iteration

J
justification: Justification

K
Knuth, Donald Ervin: Citations
Knuth, Donald Ervin: Category codes

L
labels on items, changing: Formatting lists
labels, characters valid in: Cross-references
labels, empty equation: Equation references
labels, empty equation, referring to: Equation references
Lamport, Leslie: Introduction
LAMSTeX: Logos
Lang, Serge: Arrows and morphisms
Lang, Serge: Construction of commutative diagrams
large operators and hyperlinks: Options supported by all drivers
large operators and hyperlinks: Setting group options
LaTeX: Introduction
LaTeX: Citations
LaTeX: Logos
LaTeX: Slanted lines and vectors
LaTeX commands, in btxmac.tex: Commands from LaTeX
LaTeX graphics collection: Loading LaTeX packages
LaTeX graphics collection: Packages known to work
LaTeX graphics collection: Hyperlink driver nolinks
LaTeX graphics collection, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
LaTeX packages: Loading LaTeX packages
LaTeX packages: Packages known to work
LaTeX packages: Packages known not to work
LaTeX packages, restoring \input: Environment for loading packages
left-alignment of equation numbers: Displays
left-justification: Justification
left-justification of displays: Displays
letterspacing: Packages known to work
linear systems theory: Construction of commutative diagrams
lines: Slanted lines and vectors
link group: Implicit hyperlinks
link options: Introduction to hyperlinks
link options, common: Options supported by all drivers
link options, dvipdfm: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
link options, hypertex: Link options for hypertex
link options, pdftex: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
link type: Introduction to hyperlinks
link types, dvipdfm: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
link types, hypertex: Link types for hypertex
link types, pdftex: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
link, group options: Setting hyperlink types and options
link, group options: Setting group options
link, group options, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
link, group type: Setting hyperlink types and options
link, group type: Setting group types
linkgroup: Implicit hyperlinks
linkgroup options: Setting hyperlink types and options
linkgroup options: Setting group options
linkgroup options, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
linkgroup type: Setting hyperlink types and options
linkgroup type: Setting group types
linkgroup ‘cite’: Citation hyperlinks
linkgroup ‘eq’: Equation reference hyperlinks
linkgroup ‘eq’: Setting group options
linkgroup ‘foot’: Footnote hyperlinks
linkgroup ‘footback’: Footnote hyperlinks
linkgroup ‘hrefext’: General hyperlinks
linkgroup ‘hrefint’: General hyperlinks
linkgroup ‘idx’: Index hyperlinks
linkgroup ‘ref’: Cross-reference hyperlinks
linkgroup ‘url’: URL hyperlinks
linkgroup ‘xref’: Page reference hyperlinks
links, hypertext: Hyperlinks
list of figures: Alternative contents files
list of tables: Alternative contents files
listing files: Verbatim listing
listing files, demo: Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)
lists: Lists
lists, formatting: Formatting lists
lists, hyperlinks: List hyperlinks
loading packages, environment for: Environment for loading packages
logos: Logos
lookahead without spaces: \futurenonspacelet
loops: Iteration
lscommnt.tex: Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)

M
magnification, hyperlink destination: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
makeindex: Invoking Eplain
makeindex: Indexing
makeindex: Index hyperlinks
margins, changing: Margins
margins, index terms in: Proofing index terms
mathematics displays, formatting: Displays
mathematics displays, hyperlinks: Options supported by all drivers
mathematics displays, hyperlinks: Setting group options
Metafont: Logos
miniltx.tex: Loading LaTeX packages
minimal realizations: Construction of commutative diagrams
modifying index entries’ page numbers: Modifying index entries
morphisms: Arrows and morphisms
multiple column output: Multiple columns
multiple indexes: Indexing

N
named destination: Link types for hypertex
named destination: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
names, of TeX variants: Logos
new window, opening hyperlink in: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
newlinechar: Diagnostics
newlines, obeying: Obeying spaces
nolinks, hyperlink driver: Hyperlink driver nolinks
numbered destination: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
numbered lists: Lists
numbered references: Citations
numbers, detecting: \ifinteger and \isinteger
numbers, written form of: Writing out numbers

O
Oberdiek, Heiko: Checking for PDF output
omitting hyperlinks: Hyperlink driver nolinks
omitting hyperlinks: Turning hyperlinks on/off
omitting typesetting of graphics: Packages known to work
open boxes: Boxes
option list, group: Setting group options
option list, preserving for group: Setting group options
options, destination, common: Options supported by all drivers
options, destination, dvipdfm: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
options, destination, hypertex: Destination options for hypertex
options, destination, pdftex: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
options, link and destination: Introduction to hyperlinks
options, link, common: Options supported by all drivers
options, link, dvipdfm: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
options, link, hypertex: Link options for hypertex
options, link, pdftex: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
ordered list: Lists
output routine and index proofing: Proofing index terms
overstriking: Packages known to work

P
packages, LaTeX: Loading LaTeX packages
packages, LaTeX: Packages known to work
packages, LaTeX: Packages known not to work
page destination: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
page list, parsing: Page destinations for index terms
page range, parsing: Page destinations for index terms
page reference hyperlink: Page reference hyperlinks
page-breaking, preserving with hyperlinks: Hyperlink driver nolinks
parsing page numbers: Page destinations for index terms
Patashnik, Oren: Citations
pathnames, breaking: Paths
pathnames, breaking: Packages known to work
PDF: Packages known to work
PDF output: Checking for PDF output
pdftex: Invoking Eplain
pdftex: Checking for PDF output
pdftex: Introduction to hyperlinks
pdftex, destination options: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
pdftex, destination types: Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
pdftex, hyperlink driver: Hyperlink drivers pdftex and dvipdfm
pdftex, link options: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
pdftex, link types: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
pdfTeX, problems using color and graphics: Packages known to work
pdfTeX, problems with supp-mis.tex: Packages known to work
pict2e.sty: Packages known not to work
picture mode: Packages known to work
picture mode: Slanted lines and vectors
Portable Document Format: Packages known to work
PostScript point: Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
PostScript point: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm
PostScript point: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
proofing index terms: Proofing index terms
properties: Properties
ps2pdf: Hyperlink driver hypertex
ps2pdf: Hyperlink driver hypertex
psfrag.sty: Packages known to work

Q
quadruple column output: Multiple columns

R
Rahtz, Sebastian: Loading LaTeX packages
raising hyperlink destinations: Options supported by all drivers
raising hyperlink destinations: Setting group options
ranges and index entry: Modifying index entries
recognizing numbers: \ifinteger and \isinteger
rectangles: Boxes
references, alphanumeric: Citations
references, defining general: Defining generic references
references, defining general: Using generic references
references, numbered: Citations
register allocation: Allocation macros
restoring \input, LaTeX packages: Environment for loading packages
return character: Category codes
right-justification: Justification
rms: Introduction
rotation: Packages known to work
rotation, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
rule thickness: Rules
run:’ links: General hyperlinks

S
scaling: Packages known to work
scaling, demo: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
sed: Customizing indexing
see also index entries and hyperlinks: Hyperlinks in see and see also entries
see also index entries and sorting: Customizing indexing
see, and index entries: Modifying index entries
see, and index entries: Customizing indexing
see, and index entries, hyperlinks: Hyperlinks in see and see also entries
silent indexing: Indexing terms
skipping tokens: \ifundefined
skipping tokens: \ifempty
SLiTeX: Logos
Snake Lemma: Arrows and morphisms
solid hyperlink border: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
sorting an index: Indexing
sorting of index entries: Indexing commands
soul.sty: Packages known to work
space above index entries: Typesetting an index
spaces, ignoring: \futurenonspacelet
spaces, obeying: Obeying spaces
spaces, trailing and indexing commands: Indexing terms
spacing out: Packages known to work
spacing, preserving with hyperlinks: Hyperlink driver nolinks
special characters: Verbatim listing
special characters, in index entries: Index entries with special characters
special characters, in table of contents: Writing the .toc file
Stallman, Richard: Introduction
striking out: Packages known to work
style, hyperlink border: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
subequations, referring to: Subequation references
subterm in indexing: Indexing terms
supp-mis.tex, problems with pdfTeX: Packages known to work
supp-pdf.tex: Packages known to work

T
table of contents: Contents
table of contents, and verbatim text: Writing the .toc file
table of contents, hyperlinks: Contents hyperlinks
table of contents, short: Reading the .toc file
table of contents, short: Macro arguments
tables: Tables
tabs: Obeying spaces
TeX by Topic: Iteration
TeX Frequently Asked Question: \ifinteger and \isinteger
TEXFORMATS: Installation
texi2dvi: Invoking Eplain
texi2dvi: Citations
texi2dvi: Indexing
Texinfo: Introduction
TEXINPUTS: Installation
time of day: Time of day
toc files, writing several: Changing the .toc file's root name
tracing: Diagnostics
trailing spaces and indexing commands: Indexing terms
trimsee: Customizing indexing
triple column output: Multiple columns
Tu, Loring W.: Construction of commutative diagrams
TUGboat: Introduction
type, link and destination: Introduction to hyperlinks
types, destination, dvipdfm: Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
types, destination, hypertex: Destination types for hypertex
types, destination, pdftex: Destination types for pdftex and dvipdfm
types, link, dvipdfm: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
types, link, hypertex: Link types for hypertex
types, link, pdftex: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
typesetting an index: Typesetting an index

U
undefined control sequence, checking for: \ifundefined
undefined labels, warnings about: Installation
underline hyperlink border: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
underlining: Packages known to work
underlining page numbers in index: Page list and page range parsers
universal mapping property: Construction of commutative diagrams
unordered lists: Lists
upgrading: Installation
URL for ifpdf.sty: Checking for PDF output
URL for MakeIndex: Indexing
URL for path.sty: Paths
URL for pdfTeX: Checking for PDF output
URL for texnames.sty: Logos
URL hyperlink: General hyperlinks
URL hyperlink: URL hyperlinks
URL hyperlink: Link types for hypertex
URL hyperlink: Link types for pdftex and dvipdfm
url.sty: Packages known to work
url.sty: URL hyperlinks
url.sty: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)
user-inaccessible macros: Category codes

V
vectors: Slanted lines and vectors
verbatim listing: Verbatim listing
verbatim listing, demo: Highlighting TeX comments in listings (lscommnt.tex)
verbatim text, in index: Index entries with special characters
verbatim text, in table of contents: Writing the .toc file
version number: Introduction

W
Walden, David: Introduction
Warner, Frank W.: Construction of commutative diagrams
whatsits made by hyperlinks: Hyperlink driver nolinks
whatsits made by index entries: Indexing commands
while loops: Iteration
whitespace: Obeying spaces
width, hyperlink border: Link options for pdftex and dvipdfm
writing several toc files: Changing the .toc file's root name

X
xcolor.sty: Packages known not to work
xdvi: Hyperlink driver hypertex
XeLaTeX: Logos
xeplain.tex: Introduction
XeTeX: Logos
xhyper.tex: Hyperlinks (xhyper.tex)

Z
Zassenhaus, Hans: Construction of commutative diagrams
zooming, hyperlink destination: Destination options for pdftex and dvipdfm

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