-- with apologies to Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart.
-Text adventures, otherwise known collectively as interactive fiction (IF),
+.. only:: html
+
+ .. image:: /images/picT.png
+ :align: left
+
+.. raw:: latex
+
+ \dropcap{t}
+
+ext adventures, otherwise known collectively as interactive fiction (IF),
were highly popular computer games during the 1980s. As technology evolved
they faded from the market, unable to compete with increasingly
sophisticated graphical games; however, IF was far from dead. The Internet
glossary -- Appendix G on page 273. We switch to italic type for a
placeholder: for example you should read the Inform statement:
-.. parsed-literal::
-
- print "*string*";
+ :samp:`print "{string}";`
as meaning "display on the player's screen the arbitrary character or
characters which are represented here by the placeholder *string*".
A more general list of FAQs about IF authorship, covering both Inform
and the other main systems.
-* news:rec.arts.int-fiction
+* :newsgroup:`rec.arts.int-fiction`
The Usenet newsgroup for authors of IF, commonly known by the
abbreviation RAIF. Here you'll find discussion on IF technology,
assistance with your own "how do I..." questions (but please, look in
the manual first).
-* news:rec.games.int-fiction
+* :newsgroup:`rec.games.int-fiction`
The complementary newsgroup for IF *players*, often known as RGIF.
Alphabet", digitised from a collection of public domain woodcuts, circa
1834, by Steven J. Lundeen of emerald city fontwerks.
-.. todo::
-
- Reference to the drop-caps should only apply to those places they're
- used (just the PDF?).
-
All credit to the generosity of http://briefcase.yahoo.com/ for making
international file-sharing such a breeze.