From 6a0cf3b57a51d5f3c60bd1bcc53619dce9cf0355 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?John=20Ankarstr=C3=B6m?= Date: Sun, 31 Jan 2021 00:14:05 +0000 Subject: Remove (linktext) links, add links --- README | 53 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-------------------- 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 20 deletions(-) (limited to 'README') diff --git a/README b/README index 8dd0f01..b93212b 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ never more than a single possible em representation. Em values readability over expressiveness. This means that it is rather limited in terms of what HTML it can produce. Most noticeably, only a very limited -form of inline links are supported (see *Lists* and *Inline formatting*). +form of inline links are supported (see *Hyperlinks* below). Em also values consistency and predictability. As such, the syntax is rather strict. This makes it a bit harder to learn, but much more predictable. @@ -17,10 +17,6 @@ Em's complete and exact syntax is defined by its implementation [1], but a general description follows below. For longer examples, see the source code for this text [2] or the test file [3]. - [1] ../tree/README - [2] ../tree/test.em - [3] ../tree/emparse - Em is implemented in portable awk, with an rc script to bind it together. It is written on and for Plan 9 primarily, but the rc code can (more or less) trivially be translated to POSIX shell; the work just hasn't been done yet. @@ -58,6 +54,16 @@ Inline references are created with square brackets: [1] The quick brown fox ... +In the final output, the inline reference becomes a link to the +reference item later in the document: + +

Example of an inline reference [1]. +

+
    +
  1. The quick brown fox ... +
  2. +
+ For more information about references, see *Reference lists* below. --- @@ -65,20 +71,21 @@ For more information about references, see *Reference lists* below. === Hyperlinks === Hyperlinks are a special case of inline references. When an inline -reference refers to a reference containing only a web address, -the inline reference is replaced with a hyperlink to that address. +reference refers to a reference containing a single link, the inline +reference points directly to that link, rather than at the reference. - It is available for download [2]. + It is available for download [1]. - [2] v1.tgz + [1] <./v1.tgz> The above example translates to the following HTML: -

It is available for download (link). +

It is available for download [1].

- -The default link text ("link") can be changed by setting -the `linktext` environment variable. +
    +
  1. ./v1.tgz +
  2. +
--- @@ -147,15 +154,13 @@ to which you can make inline references: [1] The quick brown fox ... _Note:_ There is a special type of reference list item called a -*hyperlink reference*. It contains only a single word, -without whitespace: +*hyperlink reference*. It contains only a single link: - [1] http://example.com + [1] -Hyperlink reference items are removed in the final output, -but you can still reference them inline: - - You can download the file here [1]. +Hyperlink references behave just like normal references, except +inline references to them link directly to the link rather than the +reference item. --- @@ -176,3 +181,11 @@ _Paragraphs start with no space:_ with two lines. This is another paragraph. + +--- + +== References == + + [1] <../tree/README> + [2] <../tree/test.em> + [3] <../tree/emparse> -- cgit v1.2.3