can't find the mistake. Don't worry, it's there somewhere. Persistence
always pays off in the end.)
-To help you out in this daunting task, Inform has a stock of special
-actions: the debugging verbs. They become available at run-time when the
-source file is compiled in **Debug mode** (``-D switch``). When you are
-ready to release your game, you’ll have to recompile, switching off
-Debug to avoid allowing the players to benefit from the debugging verbs.
-We'll cover briefly a few of these actions, and tell you what they do.
+To help you out in this daunting task, Inform has a stock of special
+actions: the debugging verbs. They become available at run-time when the
+source file is compiled in :term:`Debug mode` (``-D switch``). When you are
+ready to release your game, you’ll have to recompile, switching off Debug
+to avoid allowing the players to benefit from the debugging verbs. We'll
+cover briefly a few of these actions, and tell you what they do.
Command lists
TRACE (or TRACE ON ), TRACE *number* and TRACE OFF
- If you turn on this powerful verb, you'll be able to follow the
- activity of the **parser** -- that part of the library which tries to
- make sense of what the player types -- and this will indeed be a
- wonderful moment of gratitude that someone else took the trouble of
- writing it. Since the parser does so many things, you can decide the
- level of detail about the displayed information with the *number*
- parameter, which can go from 1 (minimum info) to 5 (maximum info). By
- default, TRACE ON and TRACE with no number sets level 1. Trace level
- 1 shows the grammar line that the parser is thinking about, while
- level 2 shows each individual token on each grammar line that it
- tries. The information displayed with higher levels may become quite
- hacky, and you are advised to use this feature only if nothing else
- helps.
-
+ If you turn on this powerful verb, you'll be able to follow the activity
+ of the :term:`parser` -- that part of the library which tries to make
+ sense of what the player types -- and this will indeed be a wonderful
+ moment of gratitude that someone else took the trouble of writing
+ it. Since the parser does so many things, you can decide the level of
+ detail about the displayed information with the *number* parameter, which
+ can go from 1 (minimum info) to 5 (maximum info). By default, TRACE ON
+ and TRACE with no number sets level 1. Trace level 1 shows the grammar
+ line that the parser is thinking about, while level 2 shows each
+ individual token on each grammar line that it tries. The information
+ displayed with higher levels may become quite hacky, and you are advised
+ to use this feature only if nothing else helps.
Super-powers
============