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texinfo update (Thu Sep 16 09:22:01 EDT 2004)


From: Karl Berry
Subject: texinfo update (Thu Sep 16 09:22:01 EDT 2004)
Date: Thu, 16 Sep 2004 09:22:18 -0400

Index: doc/texinfo.txi
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvsroot/texinfo/texinfo/doc/texinfo.txi,v
retrieving revision 1.112
retrieving revision 1.113
diff -c -r1.112 -r1.113
*** doc/texinfo.txi     9 Sep 2004 17:50:27 -0000       1.112
--- doc/texinfo.txi     16 Sep 2004 13:09:03 -0000      1.113
***************
*** 1,5 ****
  \input texinfo.tex    @c -*-texinfo-*-
! @c $Id: texinfo.txi,v 1.112 2004/09/09 17:50:27 karl Exp $
  @c Ordinarily, Texinfo files have the extension .texi.  But texinfo.texi
  @c clashes with texinfo.tex on 8.3 filesystems, so we use texinfo.txi.
  
--- 1,5 ----
  \input texinfo.tex    @c -*-texinfo-*-
! @c $Id: texinfo.txi,v 1.113 2004/09/16 13:09:03 karl Exp $
  @c Ordinarily, Texinfo files have the extension .texi.  But texinfo.texi
  @c clashes with texinfo.tex on 8.3 filesystems, so we use texinfo.txi.
  
***************
*** 16280,16289 ****
  
  As mentioned in the previous section, the key part of the HTML
  cross-reference algorithm is the conversion of node names in the
! Texinfo source into strings suitable for HTML identifiers and
  filenames.  The restrictions are similar for each: plain ASCII
  letters, numbers, and the @samp{-} and @samp{_} characters are all
! that can be used.
  
  Cross-references in Texinfo can actually refer either to nodes or
  anchors (@pxref{anchor}), but anchors are treated identically to nodes
--- 16280,16290 ----
  
  As mentioned in the previous section, the key part of the HTML
  cross-reference algorithm is the conversion of node names in the
! Texinfo source into strings suitable for XHTML identifiers and
  filenames.  The restrictions are similar for each: plain ASCII
  letters, numbers, and the @samp{-} and @samp{_} characters are all
! that can be used.  (Although HTML anchors can contain most characters,
! XHTML is more restrictive.)
  
  Cross-references in Texinfo can actually refer either to nodes or
  anchors (@pxref{anchor}), but anchors are treated identically to nodes
***************
*** 18350,18356 ****
  Concurrent Versions System}) or RCS (see rcsintro(1)) version control
  systems, which expand it into a string such as:
  @example
! $Id: texinfo.txi,v 1.112 2004/09/09 17:50:27 karl Exp $
  @end example
  (This is useful in all sources that use version control, not just manuals.)
  You may wish to include the @samp{$Id:} comment in the @code{@@copying}
--- 18351,18357 ----
  Concurrent Versions System}) or RCS (see rcsintro(1)) version control
  systems, which expand it into a string such as:
  @example
! $Id: texinfo.txi,v 1.113 2004/09/16 13:09:03 karl Exp $
  @end example
  (This is useful in all sources that use version control, not just manuals.)
  You may wish to include the @samp{$Id:} comment in the @code{@@copying}
***************
*** 18416,18422 ****
  
  @verbatim
  \input texinfo   @c -*-texinfo-*-
! @comment $Id: texinfo.txi,v 1.112 2004/09/09 17:50:27 karl Exp $
  @comment %**start of header
  @setfilename sample.info
  @include version.texi
--- 18417,18423 ----
  
  @verbatim
  \input texinfo   @c -*-texinfo-*-
! @comment $Id: texinfo.txi,v 1.113 2004/09/16 13:09:03 karl Exp $
  @comment %**start of header
  @setfilename sample.info
  @include version.texi
P doc/texinfo.txi


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