On 26/2/19 5:42 pm, Sebastian Huber wrote: > I think both presentations make sense. With the $ indication you can place > multiple commands together with the command output in one block. Using > separate > blocks for commands and output allows you to simply copy and based multiple > commands to a terminal.
What about the attached patch to the README.txt? I can add it to the v2 of this patch set. Chris
From fddc87c8ea588422317cdef112dffae48027ab86 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Chris Johns <chr...@rtems.org> Date: Wed, 27 Feb 2019 17:28:00 +1100 Subject: [PATCH] Add commands and output to the README. --- README.txt | 28 ++++++++++++++++++++++++---- 1 file changed, 24 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.txt b/README.txt index e002f60..115d08d 100644 --- a/README.txt +++ b/README.txt @@ -415,14 +415,34 @@ existing documentation for an example and if unsure ask. 5 ^^^^^^ Sub-sub-sub-section 6 ~~~~~~ Sub-sub-sub-sub-section -5. For literal output, such as shell commands and code use '::' at the trailing - edge of the previous paragraph. Use the '.. code-block::' with - 'c' for C code and 'shell' for shell code and terminal output. If you need - line number use: +5. For literal output, such as shell commands and code do not use '::' + at the trailing edge of the previous paragraph as it generates + warnings as the autodetect fails to find a suitable format. Use the + '.. code-block::' with a suitable lexical label. The lexers are: + + http://pygments.org/docs/lexers/ + + Use the short names. For C code use 'c' code and 'shell' for shell + scripts and for terminal output use 'none'. If you need line number + use: .. code-block:: shell :linenos: + We support two forms of commands and outputs. + + The first is to have a shell command block with just the commands + and if required an output block with the output or some of the + output. Use 'none' for the output block. Make sure the text clearly + states the block is the output, if there it has been edited to make + it short and if there are any special operating modes, for example + needing to be 'root'. + + The second is to use a single block of type 'none' with the command + and output together as seen in a terminal session. The commands are + identifed by the standard shell prompt characters where '$' is a + user prompt and '#' is a 'root' prompt. + 6. Use the directives for 'note', 'warning', and 'topic'. Do not add 'TIP', 'Important' or 'Warning' to the text. Let the mark-up language handle this. The supported directives are: -- 2.19.1
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