From: Jonathan Leech-Pepin <jonathan.leechpepin@gmail.com>
To: Subhan Tindall <subhan.tindall@rentrakmail.com>
Cc: Org-mode <emacs-orgmode@gnu.org>
Subject: Re: pxref in texinfo export
Date: Mon, 25 Feb 2013 15:24:33 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <CAEWDx5ctecUfaPgPro4hvLDqfHU28iE5yW4S06tnvLYugqxoQQ@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAKKEbDt-+1NCFSpNperv=5aPpqECMGOMp89AUsknJuLQKW3VKQ@mail.gmail.com>
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Hello,
On 25 February 2013 14:01, Subhan Tindall <subhan.tindall@rentrakmail.com>wrote:
> The point being that compiling .texinfo source into an Info file
> treats references differently. For example:
> (@pxref{my_node_name}). will compile just fine.
> (@ref{my_node_name}). will not.
Both work perfectly fine for me.
makeinfo (GNU texinfo) 5.0
> There are also differences in case
> (see v. See, note v. Note), and differences in output by ref type
> depending on target output of file (info, DVI, HTML,...). For example,
> @pxref generates different punctuation for typeset v. info files, @ref
> does not generate a 'See ' in printed material while @xref does, etc.
>
> Although the differences are subtle, they really are not equivalent
> and should not be treated as such.
>
With a slight amount of work on the user's part, they can be made
functionally equivalent on export.
Using the two attached minimal .texi files (good-ref.texi is using
@xref/@pxref as is preferred while ref.texi is using @ref with
appropriate See/see added in the text) and disregarding filename
differences (since they are noted in the info output) I get the
following differences:
> makeinfo --html --no-split good-ref.texi ref.texi
0 Diffs
> makeinfo --docbook --no-split good-ref.texi ref.texi
Filename ID appears in diff
> makeinfo --xml --no-split good-ref.texi ref.texi
Filename difference.
Links are different since TexinfoML does still distinguish xref/pxref
and ref in how they create the links.
> makeinfo --no-split good-ref.texi ref.texi
The info file does show the expected differences between the two
documents, notably that the "@xref{}" becomes "*Note" while the
equivalent "See @ref{}" becomes "See *note" with @pxref{}->*note vs
see @ref{} -> see *note.
However once they are viewed within the *info* buffer (C-u C-h i
good-ref.info/ref-only.info) the lines in question are visually
identical since *Note becomes "See" and *note becomes "see" if there
is not already "see" present.
I will not disagree that @ref, @pxref and @xref are subtly different,
however with slight user intervention @ref can be used in the same
above locations by simply replacing:
@xref{} -> "See @ref{}"
@pxref{} -> "see @ref{}"
I had to compare these possible outcomes when working on the texinfo
exporter. Since links are parsed before being included in their
paragraphs, I did not have a way to obtain context and therefore
attempt to guess (and be successful) at which type of reference was
intended by a link in Org. Restricting it to @ref{} in all cases,
even if it added a slight burden to the user (4 additional characters
to type in Org) if they wanted to emulate @xref or @pxref was in my
opinion the best choice.
Regards,
--
Jon
[...]
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2013-02-25 20:24 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 13+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2013-02-25 17:52 pxref in texinfo export Thomas S. Dye
2013-02-25 18:32 ` Jonathan Leech-Pepin
2013-02-25 18:40 ` Subhan Tindall
2013-02-25 18:48 ` Jonathan Leech-Pepin
2013-02-25 19:01 ` Subhan Tindall
2013-02-25 20:24 ` Jonathan Leech-Pepin [this message]
2013-02-25 20:29 ` Jonathan Leech-Pepin
2013-02-25 21:34 ` Subhan Tindall
2013-02-25 22:01 ` Jonathan Leech-Pepin
2013-02-25 21:38 ` Nicolas Goaziou
2013-02-25 21:48 ` Subhan Tindall
2013-02-25 22:06 ` Jonathan Leech-Pepin
2013-02-25 22:23 ` Nicolas Goaziou
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