view doc/interpreter/macros.texi @ 30564:796f54d4ddbf stable

update Octave Project Developers copyright for the new year In files that have the "Octave Project Developers" copyright notice, update for 2021. In all .txi and .texi files except gpl.txi and gpl.texi in the doc/liboctave and doc/interpreter directories, change the copyright to "Octave Project Developers", the same as used for other source files. Update copyright notices for 2022 (not done since 2019). For gpl.txi and gpl.texi, change the copyright notice to be "Free Software Foundation, Inc." and leave the date at 2007 only because this file only contains the text of the GPL, not anything created by the Octave Project Developers. Add Paul Thomas to contributors.in.
author John W. Eaton <jwe@octave.org>
date Tue, 28 Dec 2021 18:22:40 -0500
parents 7854d5752dd2
children 597f3ee61a48
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@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
@c
@c Copyright (C) 2012-2022 The Octave Project Developers
@c
@c See the file COPYRIGHT.md in the top-level directory of this
@c or <https://octave.org/copyright/>.
@c
@c
@c This file is part of Octave.
@c
@c Octave is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it
@c under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
@c the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
@c (at your option) any later version.
@c
@c Octave is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
@c WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
@c MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
@c GNU General Public License for more details.
@c
@c You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
@c along with Octave; see the file COPYING.  If not, see
@c <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@c
@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------

@c The following macro marks words that aspell should ignore during
@c spellchecking.  Within Texinfo it has no effect as it merely replaces
@c the macro call with the argument itself.

@macro nospell {arg}
\arg\
@end macro

@c The following macro works around the Info/plain text expansion of @code{XXX}
@c which is `XXX'.  This looks particularly bad when the macro body is
@c single or double-quoted text, such as a property value `"position"'.
@c The mnemonic to remember this macro is Quoted CODE.

@ifinfo
@macro qcode{arg}
\arg\
@end macro
@end ifinfo
@ifnotinfo
@macro qcode{arg}
@code{\arg\}
@end macro
@end ifnotinfo

@c The following macro works around the Info/plain text expansion of @code{XXX}
@c which is `XXX'.  This can be confusing when the macro body itself
@c ends with a transpose character, such as `x''.
@c The mnemonic to remember this macro is Transpose CODE.

@ifinfo
@macro tcode{arg}
\arg\
@end macro
@end ifinfo
@ifnotinfo
@macro tcode{arg}
@code{\arg\}
@end macro
@end ifnotinfo

@c The following macro is used for the on-line help system, but we don't want
@c lots of `See also: foo, bar, and baz' strings cluttering the printed manual
@c (that information should be in the supporting text for each group of
@c functions and variables).
@c
@c Implementation Note:
@c For TeX, @vskip produces a nice separation.
@c For Texinfo, '@sp 1' should work, but in practice produces ugly results
@c for HTML.  We use a simple blank line to produce the correct behavior.
@c
@c The macro is named @xseealso now because Texinfo introduced its own @seealso
@c command.  But, instead of modifying all source files, the build system uses
@c the munge-texi script to convert @seealso to @xseealso.

@macro xseealso {args}
@iftex
@vskip 2pt
@end iftex
@ifnottex

@end ifnottex
@ifnotinfo
@noindent
@strong{See also:} \args\.
@end ifnotinfo
@ifinfo
@noindent
See also: \args\.
@end ifinfo
@end macro

@c ------------------------------------------------------------
@c non-macro items
@c ------------------------------------------------------------

@c These may be useful for all, not just for octave.texi.
@tex
  \ifx\rgbDarkRed\thisisundefined
    \def\rgbDarkRed{0.50 0.09 0.12}
  \fi
  \ifx\linkcolor\thisisundefined
    \relax
  \else
    \global\def\linkcolor{\rgbDarkRed}
  \fi
  \ifx\urlcolor\thisisundefined
    \relax
  \else
    \global\def\urlcolor{\rgbDarkRed}
  \fi
  \ifx\urefurlonlylinktrue\thisisundefined
    \relax
  \else
    \global\urefurlonlylinktrue
  \fi
@end tex

@c Make the apostrophe in code examples cut-and-paste friendly so programmers
@c can take examples from the Octave manual and directly run them in Octave.
@codequoteundirected on