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;;; eq.skb -- Equation formatting.
;;;
;;; Copyright 2006 Ludovic Court�s <ludovic.courtes@laas.fr>
;;;
;;;
;;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
;;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
;;; (at your option) any later version.
;;;
;;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;;;
;;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;;; along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
;;; Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301,
;;; USA.
;;; FIXME: This is a stub and must be completed!
(chapter :title [Equation Formatting]
(p [Skribilo comes with an equation formatting package. This package
may be loaded by adding the following form at the top of your document:]
(disp (prog (source :language scheme
[(use-modules (skribilo package eq))])))
[It allows the inclusion of (complex) equations in your documents,
such as, for example, the following:]
(disp (eq :renderer (if (engine-format? "html") 'lout #f)
:ident "eq-disponibilite"
`(= (apply A D)
(sum :from (= i b) :to (* S b)
(* (script :sup (* S b) :sub i C)
(* (expt mu i)
(expt (- 1 mu)
(- (* S b) i))))))))
[This chapter will describe the syntactic facilities available to
describe equations, as well as the rendering options.])
(section :title [Syntax]
(p [To start with, let's have a look at a concrete example. ]
(example-produce
(example :legend "Example of a simple equation using the verbose syntax"
(prgm :file "src/eq1.skb"))
(disp (include "src/eq1.skb")))
[In this example, the ,(tt [eq:]) sub-markups are used pretty
much like any other kind of markup. However, the resulting syntax
is very verbose and hard to read.])
(p [Fortunately, the ,(tt [eq]) package allows for the use of a
much simpler syntax. ]
(example-produce
(example :legend "Example of a simple equation"
(prgm :file "src/eq2.skb"))
(disp (include "src/eq2.skb")))
[Readers familiar with the Lisp family of programming languages
may have already recognized its ,(emph [prefix notation]). Note that,
unlike in the previous example, the equation itself if ,(emph [quoted]),
that is, preceded by the ,(tt [']) sign. Additionally, when referring
to a symbol (such as the Greek letter ,(symbol "phi")), you no longer
need to use the ,(tt [symbol]) markup (,(numref :text [see Section]
:ident "symbols")).]))
;; FIXME: Write this.
(section :title [Rendering])
(section :title [Summary]
(p [The options available for the top-level ,(code [eq]) markup
are summarized here:])
(doc-markup 'eq
`((:inline? [A boolean indicating whether the equation
is to appear "inline", i.e., within a paragraph. If the engine supports
it, it may adjust various parameters such as in-equation spacing
accordingly.])
(:renderer [The engine that should be used to render
the equation. This allows, for instance, to use the Lout engine to
render equations in HTML.])
(:div-style [A symbol denoting the default style for
divisions. This should be one of ,(code [over]), ,(code [fraction]),
,(code [div]) and ,(code [slash]). Per-,(code [eq:/]) ,(code
[:div-style]) options override this setting.]))
:source "skribilo/package/eq.scm"))
)
;;; arch-tag: e9c83c13-205f-4f68-9100-b445c21b959c
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