Hi Karl, all, > > +MacOS X 10.5, FreeBSD 6.0, NetBSD 5.0, OpenBSD 3.8, Minix 3.1.8, AIX > > Could you please break the line after a comma? > > I suggest using @tie{} between os (or program or ...) names and > versions. That way the line breaks come out ok in both the source and > the output.
Indeed, the result looks better (at least in HTML). I tested @item This function is missing on some platforms: MacOS@tie{}X@tie{}10.5, FreeBSD@tie{}6.0, NetBSD@tie{}5.0, OpenBSD@tie{}3.8, Minix@tie{}3.1.8, AIX@tie{}5.1, HP-UX@tie{}11, IRIX@tie{}6.5, Solaris@tie{}11@tie{}2010-11, Cygwin, mingw, MSVC@tie{}9, BeOS. But it reduces the readability of the .texi file, leading to two problems with the way I work currently: - Often I point people to the newest .texi files in the repository, because we update the documentation on www.gnu.org rather seldomly. - Often I copy&paste between these .texi files and email. Hmm. What do the others think? > Requiring manually broken source lines defeats M-x fill-paragraph. Basically I was explaining to Eric that he should not use M-x fill-paragraph on these paragraphs, because the result that M-x fill-paragraph produces makes it more complicated to do mass modifications to 500 files at once. > (Also, I suggest MacOSX or MacOS@tie{}X instead of MacOS X, for > precisely the reason you cite.) MacOS@tie{}X is fine with me *if* we decide to use it systematically. I wouldn't want to have half of the spellings be "MacOS X" and the other half "MacOS@tie{}X". Bruno -- In memoriam The inmates of the Daugavpils Ghetto <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daugavpils_Ghetto>