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
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,
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
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
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