| 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 |
Due to "internal pressure" I've given in to hacking (what else should one do?) a Scan procedure for RNO --> SDML. I'd like to be able to translate the DSR tag # (=space) into a fixed space. TeX knows it as a ~ , but does Document have a "required space" ? (To discourage people from using it, it could be defined as <BLANK_SPACE_FOR_THOSE_WHO_REALLY_WANT_IT> rather than <S> ( :) ) ) Theo
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 746.1 | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Tue Aug 04 1987 13:50 | 8 | |
Do it as
<ALIGN_CHAR>(#)
The text containing the#number sign as a fixed space.
<ENDALIGN_CHAR>
maybe? I'm not sure if <ALIGN_CHAR> is valid in all contexts though.
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| 746.2 | no flash | VAXUUM::SEGAL | Tue Aug 04 1987 14:02 | 9 | |
It's invalid in math and has restrictions in monospaced examples.
The TeX side of the tag is to use \phantom{0} for each #
within the <align_char>(#) ... <endalign_char> group. The size
of the 'fixed' space is relative to the font, and will vary
according to context (which is what you want when you are
typesetting rather than typewriting).
Lee
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