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From: | Dan Sebald |
Subject: | [Octave-bug-tracker] [bug #52775] PDF user manual uses a backward apostrophe ` in code examples |
Date: | Fri, 12 Jan 2018 05:26:42 -0500 (EST) |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux x86_64; rv:55.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/55.0 |
Follow-up Comment #26, bug #52775 (project octave): The reason for the use of @sortas is to clean up an index having to cover words, symbols and whatever else in an organized and uncluttered fashion. Look at a copy of the octave.pdf from before and after all the changes. Older Texinfo versions and release-note history? I just read the Texinfo manual which said @sortas{} does what it does, and hey it worked. What is wrong with option 1? I don't see it as that important that HTML and PDF indices should match the exact same position (the fact one is single-column, the other two-column is already noticeably different), plus it will self-correct as Linux bundlers update their Texinfo versions. _______________________________________________________ Reply to this item at: <http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?52775> _______________________________________________ Message sent via/by Savannah http://savannah.gnu.org/
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