X-Git-Url: https://jxself.org/git/?p=ibg.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=about.rst;h=9c8f55e80e12152c179a1b5332b10b31e245acac;hp=7ba7ee0005c261fc2fa101a7110a2f143a04acda;hb=d243892ad9717d0d1cbb0dbc941b229b24a7f09e;hpb=7149f9762ee9b58ce18f377e65d3ee9c5098c69b diff --git a/about.rst b/about.rst index 7ba7ee0..9c8f55e 100644 --- a/about.rst +++ b/about.rst @@ -11,7 +11,16 @@ -- 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 @@ -91,6 +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::