Re: real subscripts and superscripts?

2014-11-28 Thread Gavin Smith
On Fri, Nov 28, 2014 at 6:54 AM, Per Bothner p...@bothner.com wrote: Supposed I want to write a formula like e=mc^2 in TexInfo. In TeX I'd like it to be typeset $e = mc^2$. In HTML I'd like it to be typeset span class=mathe = mcsup2/sup/span or similar - i.e. I want to use sup2/sup. Likewise

@flushright command in HTML output

2014-11-28 Thread Mahlon
28 Nov 2014 RE: @flushright command VERSION: makeinfo 5.2 (built from source on Fedora 20 x86_64) BUG: The @flushright command is incompletely implemented for the HTML output. 'flushright' implies pre-formatted text because the whole paragraph is being shoved to the right margin; however,

Re: real subscripts and superscripts?

2014-11-28 Thread Per Bothner
On 11/28/2014 11:01 AM, Karl Berry wrote: Sure, sub/superscripts are most commonly used in math. Thus @math, as in @math{e=mc^2}. I never expected anything else to be used, certainly not clunky macros. This is why @math was created in the first place. Is your proposal really just working

Re: HTML Output for @table and @multitable and misc.

2014-11-28 Thread Karl Berry
Note that the whitespace in the header is retained, while the whitespace in the line items is compressed, which causes vertical misalignment. What I see is not related to whitespace in the input. Consider: @multitable {California} {Sacramento} {California poppy} @headitem State @tab

Re: real subscripts and superscripts?

2014-11-28 Thread Karl Berry
I want some sane way of writing i^2 and R^4 so I get tolerably-looking expressions with superscripts in both TeX andDocBook/HTML. Sure. First, with non-letter superscripts (numbers, +, etc.), you're fine with the present @sup inside math, regardless of whether @sub/@sup mean text inside