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Templates in DocTeX : Documenting and producing code within the macrocode environment
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I'm writing a DocTeX file (*.dtx) to create a family of classes. From this file I am also generating and documenting the templates that illustrate their usage.
%iffalse
%<*template>
%fi
%
% There are now two versions of the package{invoice} Package
%
% begin{macrocode}
%<VersionA>documentclass{CustomInvoiceA}
%<VersionB>documentclass{CustomInvoiceB}
% end{macrocode}
%
%iffalse
%</template>
%fi
For the most part this is working well but I can't seem to shake the guards (HTML like tags) in the documented code and I'm not sure where I'm going wrong
From Scott Pakins' DTX tutorial (Invoke texdoc --view dtxtut
from the command line to view at home) the following summary table is useful for determining where code will usually apply but the behavior is different within a macrocode
environment.
Is it possible to remove the <GUARDS>
in the output (The first image) ? I know I could move the <GUARDS>
from the macrocode
environment into additional iffalse...fi
but I would prefer not to pepper the document with these statements everywhere, perhaps there is another way.
comments dtx docstrip
|
show 2 more comments
I'm writing a DocTeX file (*.dtx) to create a family of classes. From this file I am also generating and documenting the templates that illustrate their usage.
%iffalse
%<*template>
%fi
%
% There are now two versions of the package{invoice} Package
%
% begin{macrocode}
%<VersionA>documentclass{CustomInvoiceA}
%<VersionB>documentclass{CustomInvoiceB}
% end{macrocode}
%
%iffalse
%</template>
%fi
For the most part this is working well but I can't seem to shake the guards (HTML like tags) in the documented code and I'm not sure where I'm going wrong
From Scott Pakins' DTX tutorial (Invoke texdoc --view dtxtut
from the command line to view at home) the following summary table is useful for determining where code will usually apply but the behavior is different within a macrocode
environment.
Is it possible to remove the <GUARDS>
in the output (The first image) ? I know I could move the <GUARDS>
from the macrocode
environment into additional iffalse...fi
but I would prefer not to pepper the document with these statements everywhere, perhaps there is another way.
comments dtx docstrip
2
what is your question exactly? the output you show is what I would expect.
– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 1:04
@DavidCarlisle I was hoping to remove the tags in the output, is this the expected behaviour ? (I updated the question to include one)
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 8:39
1
Normally the docstrip tags allow you to make multiple files but with a shared documentation, so without the tags the documentation would be very hard t follow, eg the image you show it would look like a document with twodocumentclass
but as it is it document that two documents will be made, and shows the documentclass in each
– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 9:51
Ah so I'm fighting the design, I wasn't sure.
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:04
@DavidCarlisle Coincidentally could one stylize the tags instead with say rounded rectangles in different colours or would that be a bit gaudy ?
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:09
|
show 2 more comments
I'm writing a DocTeX file (*.dtx) to create a family of classes. From this file I am also generating and documenting the templates that illustrate their usage.
%iffalse
%<*template>
%fi
%
% There are now two versions of the package{invoice} Package
%
% begin{macrocode}
%<VersionA>documentclass{CustomInvoiceA}
%<VersionB>documentclass{CustomInvoiceB}
% end{macrocode}
%
%iffalse
%</template>
%fi
For the most part this is working well but I can't seem to shake the guards (HTML like tags) in the documented code and I'm not sure where I'm going wrong
From Scott Pakins' DTX tutorial (Invoke texdoc --view dtxtut
from the command line to view at home) the following summary table is useful for determining where code will usually apply but the behavior is different within a macrocode
environment.
Is it possible to remove the <GUARDS>
in the output (The first image) ? I know I could move the <GUARDS>
from the macrocode
environment into additional iffalse...fi
but I would prefer not to pepper the document with these statements everywhere, perhaps there is another way.
comments dtx docstrip
I'm writing a DocTeX file (*.dtx) to create a family of classes. From this file I am also generating and documenting the templates that illustrate their usage.
%iffalse
%<*template>
%fi
%
% There are now two versions of the package{invoice} Package
%
% begin{macrocode}
%<VersionA>documentclass{CustomInvoiceA}
%<VersionB>documentclass{CustomInvoiceB}
% end{macrocode}
%
%iffalse
%</template>
%fi
For the most part this is working well but I can't seem to shake the guards (HTML like tags) in the documented code and I'm not sure where I'm going wrong
From Scott Pakins' DTX tutorial (Invoke texdoc --view dtxtut
from the command line to view at home) the following summary table is useful for determining where code will usually apply but the behavior is different within a macrocode
environment.
Is it possible to remove the <GUARDS>
in the output (The first image) ? I know I could move the <GUARDS>
from the macrocode
environment into additional iffalse...fi
but I would prefer not to pepper the document with these statements everywhere, perhaps there is another way.
comments dtx docstrip
comments dtx docstrip
edited 30 mins ago
Henri Menke
75.7k8165277
75.7k8165277
asked Dec 7 '18 at 23:49
CarelCarel
638513
638513
2
what is your question exactly? the output you show is what I would expect.
– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 1:04
@DavidCarlisle I was hoping to remove the tags in the output, is this the expected behaviour ? (I updated the question to include one)
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 8:39
1
Normally the docstrip tags allow you to make multiple files but with a shared documentation, so without the tags the documentation would be very hard t follow, eg the image you show it would look like a document with twodocumentclass
but as it is it document that two documents will be made, and shows the documentclass in each
– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 9:51
Ah so I'm fighting the design, I wasn't sure.
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:04
@DavidCarlisle Coincidentally could one stylize the tags instead with say rounded rectangles in different colours or would that be a bit gaudy ?
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:09
|
show 2 more comments
2
what is your question exactly? the output you show is what I would expect.
– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 1:04
@DavidCarlisle I was hoping to remove the tags in the output, is this the expected behaviour ? (I updated the question to include one)
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 8:39
1
Normally the docstrip tags allow you to make multiple files but with a shared documentation, so without the tags the documentation would be very hard t follow, eg the image you show it would look like a document with twodocumentclass
but as it is it document that two documents will be made, and shows the documentclass in each
– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 9:51
Ah so I'm fighting the design, I wasn't sure.
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:04
@DavidCarlisle Coincidentally could one stylize the tags instead with say rounded rectangles in different colours or would that be a bit gaudy ?
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:09
2
2
what is your question exactly? the output you show is what I would expect.
– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 1:04
what is your question exactly? the output you show is what I would expect.
– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 1:04
@DavidCarlisle I was hoping to remove the tags in the output, is this the expected behaviour ? (I updated the question to include one)
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 8:39
@DavidCarlisle I was hoping to remove the tags in the output, is this the expected behaviour ? (I updated the question to include one)
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 8:39
1
1
Normally the docstrip tags allow you to make multiple files but with a shared documentation, so without the tags the documentation would be very hard t follow, eg the image you show it would look like a document with two
documentclass
but as it is it document that two documents will be made, and shows the documentclass in each– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 9:51
Normally the docstrip tags allow you to make multiple files but with a shared documentation, so without the tags the documentation would be very hard t follow, eg the image you show it would look like a document with two
documentclass
but as it is it document that two documents will be made, and shows the documentclass in each– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 9:51
Ah so I'm fighting the design, I wasn't sure.
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:04
Ah so I'm fighting the design, I wasn't sure.
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:04
@DavidCarlisle Coincidentally could one stylize the tags instead with say rounded rectangles in different colours or would that be a bit gaudy ?
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:09
@DavidCarlisle Coincidentally could one stylize the tags instead with say rounded rectangles in different colours or would that be a bit gaudy ?
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:09
|
show 2 more comments
1 Answer
1
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votes
The answer to this is "Nope Dummy !!! Don't fight the design". I'll run through the document and fix my really bad tag name choices instead.
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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The answer to this is "Nope Dummy !!! Don't fight the design". I'll run through the document and fix my really bad tag name choices instead.
add a comment |
The answer to this is "Nope Dummy !!! Don't fight the design". I'll run through the document and fix my really bad tag name choices instead.
add a comment |
The answer to this is "Nope Dummy !!! Don't fight the design". I'll run through the document and fix my really bad tag name choices instead.
The answer to this is "Nope Dummy !!! Don't fight the design". I'll run through the document and fix my really bad tag name choices instead.
answered Dec 8 '18 at 10:07
CarelCarel
638513
638513
add a comment |
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2
what is your question exactly? the output you show is what I would expect.
– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 1:04
@DavidCarlisle I was hoping to remove the tags in the output, is this the expected behaviour ? (I updated the question to include one)
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 8:39
1
Normally the docstrip tags allow you to make multiple files but with a shared documentation, so without the tags the documentation would be very hard t follow, eg the image you show it would look like a document with two
documentclass
but as it is it document that two documents will be made, and shows the documentclass in each– David Carlisle
Dec 8 '18 at 9:51
Ah so I'm fighting the design, I wasn't sure.
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:04
@DavidCarlisle Coincidentally could one stylize the tags instead with say rounded rectangles in different colours or would that be a bit gaudy ?
– Carel
Dec 8 '18 at 10:09