From 6fa6614b3a7e87e42fb39217fa20e96e74e9ebf3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?John=20Ankarstr=C3=B6m?= Date: Sun, 31 Jan 2021 13:18:23 +0000 Subject: Add information about literal hyperlinks to README --- README | 37 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------- 1 file changed, 28 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-) (limited to 'README') diff --git a/README b/README index 471ebce..a434797 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -8,14 +8,14 @@ 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 *Hyperlinks* below). +form of inline links are supported (see *Hyperlinks* [1]). 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. -Em's complete and exact syntax is defined by its implementation [1], but a +Em's complete and exact syntax is defined by its implementation [2], but a general description follows below. For longer examples, see the source -code for this text [2] or the test file [3]. +code for this text [3] or the test file [4]. 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) @@ -73,9 +73,27 @@ 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 a single link, the inline -reference points directly to that link, rather than at the reference. +Em provides two types of hyperlinks: literal hyperlinks and hyperlink +references. + +_Literal hyperlinks_ are wrapped in less-than and greater-than signs: + + + +Most links are recognized, as long as they are free of spaces and +contain a slash or start with a hash: + + + <./page> + <#section> + +The less-than and greater-than signs are valid in the same places +as the font style formatting marks. + +_Hyperlink references_ are a special case of inline references. +When an inline reference refers to a reference containing a literal +hyperlink and nothing else, the inline reference points directly to +that link, rather than at the reference. It is available for download [1]. @@ -200,6 +218,7 @@ _Paragraphs start with no space:_ == References == - [1] <../tree/emparse> - [2] <../tree/README> - [3] <../tree/test.em> + [1] <#hyperlinks> + [2] <../tree/emparse> + [3] <../tree/README> + [4] <../tree/test.em> -- cgit v1.2.3