| Title: | DOCUMENT T1.0 |
| Notice: | **New notesfile (DOCUMENT.NOTE) now available (see note 897)** |
| Moderator: | CLOSET::ADLER |
| Created: | Mon Feb 09 1987 |
| Last Modified: | Thu Oct 31 1991 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 897 |
| Total number of notes: | 4397 |
I like the LSE tags which bring in all of the related tags. (ie.
<front_matter> which brings in <title> and other related tags.),
however... sometimes I have to remember which of these super tags
has in it just the single tag that I need. For instance, I do not
want to have to remember to always do a <front_matter> tag to do
a <title> tag which does not exist by itself.
Am I as clear as mud on this?
Regards.
Jerry
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 305.1 | paper documentation is sometimes useful | CLOSET::ANKLAM | Sat Apr 25 1987 10:16 | 5 | |
I think you will need the table summarizes the tags that Barbara
is going to put in the back of the user's guide.
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| 305.2 | Single tags available in next env. | VAXUUM::FARR | Thu Apr 30 1987 16:10 | 15 | |
In the next version of the SDML environment for LSE, each
tag that has a single page in the User's Guide will have
a token assigned to it. That is, if you invoke <FRONT_MATTER>
then you'll get all the related tags, but if you just want
<COPYRIGHT_PAGE> (and its terminator), then you'll be able
to get that by expanding on C.
There are definitely two camps on this issue...those who
want to get a full template, set of table tags, etc. into
their file, and those who just want to avoid typing a
really long single tag. I hope the next version serves
both needs more suitably.
Julie
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