@Section @Title { Paragraph breaking } @Tag { paras } @Begin @PP @I { Paragraph breaking } is the process of paragraph.breaking @Index { paragraph breaking } inserting line breaks into paragraphs at places appropriate to the column width. Lout works out suitable column widths and performs paragraph breaking automatically, finding an `optimal' break with the method used by the @TeX tex.paragraph @SubIndex { paragraph breaking } system. It offers nine styles of paragraph breaking, which we will explore with the aid of this example: @ID @OneRow @Code { It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. } Changing the paragraph breaking style is similar to changing the font, colour, or language, and is done using the @Code "@Break" symbol: breakzzz.sym @Index { @Code "@Break" symbol } @ID @Code "ragged @Break ..." This example causes every paragraph in the following object to be broken using the @Code ragged style, of which more below. @PP The first two of the nine styles perform @I { line adjustment }, which line.adjustment @Index { line adjustment } means that they enlarge the spaces between the objects making up each line so as to fill the lines completely: @IndentedList @LI @Tab @Fmta { @Col 6c @Wide @Code A ! @Col 7c @Wide B } { @Rowa A { "adjust @Break ..." } B { adjust @Break { It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. }} } @LI @Tab @Fmta { @Col 6c @Wide @Code A ! @Col 7c @Wide B } { @Rowa A { "outdent @Break ..." } B { outdent @Break { It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. }} } @EndList The @Code adjust style is frequently used, so it has been chosen as the default style. Outdenting adds a small space at the start of each line outdent. @Index { outdented paragraphs } except the first, and is much less common. @PP The next four styles do not adjust lines, leaving the paragraph ragged. @Index { @Code ragged paragraph breaking style } cragged. @Index { @Code cragged paragraph breaking style } rragged. @Index { @Code rragged paragraph breaking style } oragged. @Index { @Code oragged paragraph breaking style } {@I ragged}: @IndentedList @LI @Tab @Fmta { @Col 6c @Wide @Code A ! @Col 7c @Wide B } { @Rowa A { "ragged @Break ..." } B { ragged @Break { It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. }} } @LI @Tab @Fmta { @Col 6c @Wide @Code A ! @Col 7c @Wide B } { @Rowa A { "cragged @Break ..." } B { cragged @Break { It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. }} } @LI @Tab @Fmta { @Col 6c @Wide @Code A ! @Col 7c @Wide B } { @Rowa A { "rragged @Break ..." } B { rragged @Break { It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. }} } @LI @Tab @Fmta { @Col 6c @Wide @Code A ! @Col 7c @Wide B } { @Rowa A { "oragged @Break ..." } B { oragged @Break { It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. }} } @EndList The paragraph is broken in the same places as @Code adjust breaks it, but the resulting lines are left-justified, centred, or right-justified with respect to each other, rather than adjusted; @Code "oragged" is like @Code "outdent" except the resulting lines are not adjusted. @PP If you have a few words that must be kept together on one line, the preventing. @Index { preventing line breaks } keeping. @Index { keeping things on one line } recommended way is to separate them by an @Code "~" symbol: @ID @Code "According to Prof.~Jones, the effect of ..." It's best not to bother about this until you actually get a bad line break, since chances are good that the words will fall on one line anyway. @PP The last three styles differ from the first five in breaking the paragraph at the points where it is broken in the original input: lines. @Index { @Code lines paragraph breaking style } clines. @Index { @Code clines paragraph breaking style } rlines. @Index { @Code rlines paragraph breaking style } @IndentedList @LI @Tab @Fmta { @Col 6c @Wide @Code A ! @Col 7c @Wide B } { @Rowa A { "lines @Break ..." } B { lines @Break { It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. }} } @LI @Tab @Fmta { @Col 6c @Wide @Code A ! @Col 7c @Wide B } { @Rowa A { "clines @Break ..." } B { clines @Break { It @PageMark clines is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. }} } @LI @Tab @Fmta { @Col 6c @Wide @Code A ! @Col 7c @Wide B } { @Rowa A { "rlines @Break ..." } B { rlines @Break { It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. }} } @EndList The lines are left-justified, centred, or right-justified with respect to each other in the same way as for the ragged styles. @PP When using the @Code lines style, there are some fine points concerning the proper use of white space. Consider this example: @ID @OneRow @Code { "@IndentedDisplay lines @Break @I {" "Teach me to hear Mermaides singing," "Or to keep off envies stinging," " And finde" " What winde" "Serves to'advance an honest minde." "}" } The result is the indented display @IndentedDisplay lines @Break @I { Teach me to hear Mermaides singing, Or to keep off envies stinging, And finde What winde Serves to'advance an honest minde. } This style is the only one for which it is useful to indent individual lines in the input; as the result shows, such indents will be respected. However, Lout's rule that only white space separating objects affects the result (Section {@NumberOf spaces}) still holds, which means that indenting the first line is not effective: @ID @OneRow @Code { "@IndentedDisplay lines @Break @I {" " And finde" " What winde" "Serves to'advance an honest minde." "}" } produces @IndentedDisplay lines @Break @I { And finde What winde Serves to'advance an honest minde. } This may seem awkward at first, but actually it is extremely convenient because you don't have to worry about whether the first line of the paragraph should appear on a new line as above, or immediately after the opening brace: space at that point does not separate two objects, so it has no effect. The indent can be obtained by starting the first line with an empty object (Section {@NumberOf empty}): @ID @OneRow @Code { "@IndentedDisplay lines @Break @I {" "{} And finde" " What winde" "Serves to'advance an honest minde." "}" } The result is @IndentedDisplay lines @Break @I { {} And finde What winde Serves to'advance an honest minde. } as desired. @PP When using {@Code lines}, {@Code clines}, and {@Code "rlines @Break"}, blank lines are respected and ordinarily appear at their full height. However, it often looks better to give somewhat blanklinescale. @Index { @Code blanklinescale } less than this to blank lines. For this there is the {@Code blanklinescale} option to {@Code "@Break"}: @ID @OneRow @Code @Verbatim { @IndentedDisplay { lines blanklinescale 0.6 } @Break @I { Go, and catch a falling star, Get with child a mandrake root, Tell me, where all past years are, Or who cleft the Devil's foot, Teach me to hear Mermaides singing, Or to keep off envies stinging, And finde What winde Serves to'advance an honest minde. If thou be'st born to strange sights, Things invisible to see, Ride ten thousand days and nights, Till age snow white hairs on thee, Thou, when thou return'st, wilt tell me All strange wonders that befell thee, And swear No where Lives a woman true, and fair. } } As shown, @Code "blanklinescale" may appear at any point in the object to the left of {@Code "@Break"}, followed by a number indicating how much to scale the usual height of a blank line by. The object to the left of @Code "@Break" has to be enclosed in braces as shown, to ensure that its extent is clear. The result is @IndentedDisplay { lines blanklinescale 0.6 } @Break @I { Go, and catch a falling star, Get with child a mandrake root, Tell me, where all past years are, Or who cleft the Devil's foot, Teach me to hear Mermaides singing, Or to keep off envies stinging, And finde What winde Serves to'advance an honest minde. If thou be'st born to strange sights, Things invisible to see, Ride ten thousand days and nights, Till age snow white hairs on thee, Thou, when thou return'st, wilt tell me All strange wonders that befell thee, And swear No where Lives a woman true, and fair. } in which the verses are separated by considerably less than a full blank line; instead of a baseline-to-baseline gap of twice the interline space, as usual, the gap here is only 1.6 times the interline space. Two blank lines would give 2.2 times the interline space, and so on. There is no unit of measurement associated with {@Code "blanklinescale"}, because it is a scale factor, not a length. @PP To set the entire document in a paragraph breaking style other than {@Code "adjust"}, you need to change the @Code "@InitialBreak" option, as explained at the end of Section {@NumberOf linespace}. @PP Some people don't like to see the first line of a paragraph alone at the widows @Index { widow lines } orphans @Index { orphan lines } unbreakablefirst. @Index { @Code unbreakablefirst } unbreakablelast. @Index { @Code unbreakablelast } foot of a page or column (the rest appearing on the next page). You can instruct Lout not to allow this with @ID @Code "unbreakablefirst @Break ..." meaning that the first line cannot be broken off from the rest of the paragraph. Similarly, @ID @Code "unbreakablelast @Break ..." instructs Lout to prevent the last line of a paragraph from appearing alone at the top of a page or column. These features would probably be invoked in the @Code "@InitialBreak" option, like this: @ID @Code "@InitialBreak { unbreakablefirst unbreakablelast hyphen adjust 1.2fx }" You can turn them off with @Code "breakablefirst @Break" and @Code "breakablelast @Break". In both cases Lout makes it happen by breaking at the previous place, either between paragraphs or two lines from the end of a paragraph. Both features are compatible with Lout's @Code "@OptimizePages" option, which optimizes the overall page layout subject to these requirements. @End @Section