On Thu, Apr 15, 2010 at 11:09:24PM -0700, Mark Polesky wrote: > Graham Percival wrote: > >> 2) Putting a @uref inside an @example looks better to > >> Graham in certain situations for some reason. > > > > Reasons > > - 50%: this forces a newline, otherwise URLs can easily > > run off the right-hand edge of the page. > > IMO, a better solution would be to use @/ in @urefs, to > allow (but not force) line breaks at certain places.
You realize that splitting an URL over a linebreak is comparable to picking your nose in public, right? > > - 20%: it makes the links easier to copy&paste (just > > select the entire line, instead of hunting around for > > the character-specific boundaries -- this is a serious > > issue for people on netbooks) > > What about: > right-click > "copy link address" Dude, have you ever tried to use the trackpad on an Aspire One netbook? Hitting the right-button without changing the pointer location is a non-trivial skill to aquire, and after using this machine for a year, I have yet to master it. > Are there any PDF readers that can't do this? > Also, the user can always just click on the link > from the PDF reader (to open the URL in the default > browser). Hmm. I admit that some of my annoyance comes from conference pdfs which didn't use the \uref{} command in latex, whereas our docs definitely use it. xpdf supports links. I can't figure out how to follow them in gv (double-clicking an internal link follows it, but doing the same on an external link seems to take you a random page inside the same document. I tried this twice in case I did something weird with the trackpad). > > - 20%: it avoids the problem of punctuation when including > > URLs in a sentence. For example, see > > http://www.google.com/index.html. > > How is that even a problem? IMO, that kind of mistake is > hard to do accidentally in texinfo: > For example, see @uref{http://google.com/index.html.} But that looks really weird! Or does that just make me sound old? > > - 10%: explicit links in text looks ugly. (subjective > > judgement) > > Show me one professionally published computer programming > book that keeps URLs out of the paragraphs. The opposite > seems to be the convention; and how is this ugly? I don't read programming books, but academic conference and journal papers relegate all links to footnotes or citations (at the end of the paper). > It keeps the text flowing, rather than breaking the paragraph > into pieces for every URL. Footnotes do an even better job of this. :) What if we said that @example was recommended, but not required? Honestly, I thought the text "flowed" better with the proposed changes last email. But I won't insist on them if you really prefer your bits of the CG to look that way. :) Cheers, - Graham _______________________________________________ lilypond-devel mailing list lilypond-devel@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-devel