X-Git-Url: https://jxself.org/git/?p=ibg.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=about.rst;h=9c8f55e80e12152c179a1b5332b10b31e245acac;hp=222e34379baab49a81ddfb110ea6f67d35693b06;hb=d243892ad9717d0d1cbb0dbc941b229b24a7f09e;hpb=4fdc1023c4a964cafafa137b12ac5943f0241746 diff --git a/about.rst b/about.rst index 222e343..9c8f55e 100644 --- a/about.rst +++ b/about.rst @@ -11,8 +11,14 @@ -- with apologies to Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart. -.. image:: /images/picT.png - :align: left +.. 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 @@ -94,6 +100,15 @@ placeholder: for example you should read the Inform statement: print "*string*"; +.. todo:: + + The above will not render correctly in PDF. In PDF the leading + quotes always appear with at least one backquote. At the moment, the + best solution I can think up is to have a script fire off after LaTeX + generation to take care of this problem so that when the LaTeX code + is compiled, we'll get the correct glyphs. At the moment, I don't + know how to make such a script automatically run. + as meaning "display on the player's screen the arbitrary character or characters which are represented here by the placeholder *string*". Examples might include::