"Structured text is text that uses indentation and simple symbology to indicate the structure of a document.
A structured string consists of a sequence of paragraphs separated by one or more blank lines. Each paragraph has a level which is defined as the minimum indentation of the paragraph. A paragraph is a sub-paragraph of another paragraph if the other paragraph is the last preceding paragraph that has a lower level.
Special symbology is used to indicate special constructs:
A single-line paragraph whose immediately succeeding paragraphs are lower level is treated as a header.
A paragraph that begins with a '-', *, or o is treated as an
unordered list (bullet) element.
A paragraph that begins with a sequence of digits followed by a white-space character is treated as an ordered list element.
A paragraph that begins with a sequence of sequences, where each sequence is a sequence of digits or a sequence of letters followed by a period, is treated as an ordered list element.
A paragraph with a first line that contains some text, followed by
some white-space and -- is treated as
a descriptive list element. The leading text is treated as the
element title.
Sub-paragraphs of a paragraph that ends in the word example or the
word examples, or :: is treated as example code and is output as is:
<table border=0>
<tr>
<td> Foo
</table>
Text enclosed single quotes (with white-space to the left of the first quote and whitespace or puctuation to the right of the second quote) is treated as example code.
For example: <dtml-var foo>.
Text surrounded by * characters (with white-space to the left of the
first * and whitespace or puctuation to the right of the second *)
is emphasized.
Text surrounded by ** characters (with white-space to the left of the
first ** and whitespace or puctuation to the right of the second **)
is made strong.
Text surrounded by _ underscore characters (with whitespace to the left
and whitespace or punctuation to the right) is made underlined.
Text encloded by double quotes followed by a colon, a URL, and concluded by punctuation plus white space, or just white space, is treated as a hyper link.
For example, "Zope":http://www.zope.org/ is interpreted as
Zope
Note: This works for relative as well as absolute URLs?.
Text enclosed by double quotes followed by a comma, one or more spaces, an absolute URL and concluded by punctuation plus white space, or just white space, is treated as a hyper link.
For example: "mail me", mailto:amos@digicool.com is
interpreted as mail me
Text enclosed in brackets which consists only of letters, digits, underscores and dashes is treated as hyper links within the document.
For example: "As demonstrated by Smith [12] this technique ..."
Is interpreted as: "As demonstrated by Smith [12] this technique"
Together with the next rule this allows easy coding of references or end notes.
Text enclosed in brackets which is preceded by the start of a line, two periods and a space is treated as a named link. For example:
.. [12] "Effective Techniques" Smith, Joe ...
Is interpreted as
Note: see the <A NAME="12"> in the HTML source.
Together with the previous rule this allows easy coding of references or end notes."
See also: TextFormattingRules
| UserOptions | Last edited Mon, 27 Oct 2003 12:36:51 GMT+1 | Edit this page |