@Section @Title { Cross references and links } @Tag { cross } @Begin @PP Cross references are a useful feature of documents, but they are a cross.ref @Index { cross references } problem for authors. Suppose that at one point of your document you have @ID @OneRow @Code { "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal," "that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable Rights," "that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness..." } and that at some other point, earlier or later, you have @ID @OneRow @Code { "The anti-slavery cause, founded as it was on the Declaration" "of Independence (page 181), could appeal to patriotic as" "well as moral sentiments..." } This is a @I { cross reference }, and the problem is that as the document is revised, the Declaration of Independence might move to page 185, and the cross reference must be found and changed. @PP Lout has a simple solution to this problem. Instead of writing the pageof. @Index @Code "@PageOf" page number, write @ID @OneRow @Code { "The anti-slavery cause, founded as it was on the Declaration" "of Independence (page @PageOf { decl.of.ind }), could appeal to" "patriotic as well as moral sentiments..." } instead, and at the point referred to, write pagemark. @Index @Code "@PageMark" @ID @OneRow @Code { "We @PageMark decl.of.ind hold these truths to be self-evident, that..." } Inserting @Code "@PageMark decl.of.ind" will not affect the result, but Lout makes a note of the number of the page on which the word preceding it appears, and inserts that number in place of {@Code "@PageOf decl.of.ind"}. The tag, {@Code "decl.of.ind"}, may be any simple word (actually Lout will accept a multi-word tag, but they are very inconvenient and better avoided). The braces are there, as usual, to control grouping: we don't want the following punctuation characters in the tag. @PP One tag called @Code "last.page" is created automatically "last.page.tag" @Index { @Code "last.page" tag } for you. @Code "@PageOf last.page" gives the number of the last page of the document. For example, the result for this document is {@PageOf last.page}. @PP Cross referencing also applies to large-scale structure symbols such as @Code "@Chapter" and @Code "@Section" (any symbol with a @Code "@Title" option), as well as @Code { "@FootNote" }, @Code { "@EndNote" }, @Code { "@Figure" }, @Code { "@Table" }, the numbered display symbols, and @Code "@ListItem" and @Code "@DropListItem" (but not @Code "@TagItem" and {@Code "@DropTagItem"}). Each of these symbols has a @Code "@Tag" option: tag.option. @Index { @Code "@Tag" option } @ID @OneRow @Code { "@Section" " @Title { Cross references }" " @Tag { cross }" "@Begin" "@PP" "Cross references are a useful ..." } Now you can use the @Code "@PageOf" symbol to find the number of the page on which the symbol's result begins, and the @Code "@NumberOf" symbol to find its number: numberof. @Index @Code "@NumberOf" @ID @OneRow @Code { "For further information on this point, please consult" "Section @NumberOf cross (page @PageOf { cross })." } produces @QD { For further information on this point, please consult Section @NumberOf cross (page @PageOf { cross }). } For symbols with a @Code "@Title" option (chapters, sections, etc.) there is also the @Code "@TitleOf" symbol: @ID @OneRow @Code { "For further information on this point, please consult" "the @TitleOf { cross } section." } produces @QD { For further information on this point, please consult the @TitleOf { cross } section. } But this symbol won't work for footnotes, list items, and other things without a title. @PP Like all tags, the value of the @Code "@Tag" option should be a simple word (although Lout does accept multi-word tags). Cross referencing of list items yields just the number of the item, in Arabic, Roman, or whatever; it does not include the surrounding parentheses or other decorations introducted by the list's @Code "style" option. @PP To work cross references out, Lout has to process your document more multiple.runs @Index { multiple runs, why needed } than once, storing information between runs in special files it creates whose names end in @Code ".li" and {@Code ".ld"}. A complex document like this Guide requires five runs, but since every run produces a perfectly good PostScript file suitable for proof reading, in fact you need two runs to start with and one run per cycle of revision thereafter, only one more than would have been necessary in any case. @PP The cross referencing system assumes that each Unix directory contains directories @Index { directories, Lout files and } only one Lout document (possibly spread over many files). If you keep several documents in one directory you can turn off the cross referencing with the @Code "-s" flag: @ID @Code "lout -s simple > simple.ps" Since this will cause question marks to replace footnote and section numbers, and other products of cross referencing, it is only feasible for simple documents. Alternatively, you can reset cross referencing when switching from one document to another, by removing file lout.li @Index { @Code lout.li file } {@Code "lout.li"}. You should also remove this file if your document changes radically -- from a report to a book, say. @PP PDF viewers and recent versions of PostScript viewers offer a high-tech version of cross references called {@I links}, which allow the user to click on, say, the entry for a section in a table of contents and be immediately transported to the page on which that section begins. In principle, anything could happen when a link is clicked on, but Lout only offers two kinds of links: @I { internal links } that transport the user to some page in the current document, and @I { external links } that transports the user to a URL location on the World Wide Web. @PP Lout automatically makes an internal link out of every page number it prints in the table of contents and in the index, and every reference citation. You can also insert your own links, using the @Code "@CrossLink" symbol like this: @ID @Code "See cross @CrossLink { Section @NumberOf cross }" The @Code "@CrossLink" symbol consumes two objects, one to its left and the other to its right, and we'll explain each of these now. @PP The object on the right (@Code "Section @NumberOf cross" in our example) can be an arbitrary Lout object: you don't have to have @Code "@NumberOf" or @Code "@PageOf" inside it, although in practice you often will, since it makes sense to put a low-tech link wherever you have a high-tech one, for the benefit of readers of paper versions. This object on the right is what is printed, so the overall result in this example is @ID { See cross @CrossLink { Section @NumberOf cross } } But, beyond this, clicking anywhere on this object on the screen will invoke the link, transporting the user to some other page. @PP The object on the left (@Code cross in our example) must be a tag that is acceptable to the @Code "@PageOf" symbol described earlier in this section. The link will transport the user who clicks on it to the page that @Code "@PageOf" would point to if given that tag. You can ensure that your tag is acceptable in the usual ways: by using {@Code "@PageMark"}, or by giving the tag as the @Code "@Tag" option of a chapter, section, etc. as described earlier in this section. @PP A moment ago we said that the object to the right of @Code "@CrossLink" is what is printed by the @Code "@CrossLink" symbol. This is true by default, but there is a @Code "@CrossLinkFormat" option in the setup files which allows you to change the appearance of this printed object. (See Section {@NumberOf setup} for a general description of setup files and their options.) The default value of @Code "@CrossLinkFormat" is @ID @Code "@CrossLinkFormat { @Body }" Within the @Code "@CrossLinkFormat" option, the @Code "@Body" symbol stands for the object to the right of {@Code "@CrossLink"}. It is actually the value of @Code "@CrossLinkFormat" that is printed, so, for example, changing it to @ID @Code "@CrossLinkFormat { blue @Colour @Underline @Body }" causes all link objects to be printed in blue and underlined. If you want a special format just for one link, there is a @Code "@Format" option to @Code "@CrossLink" that overrides {@Code "@CrossLinkFormat"}: @ID @Code "cross @CrossLink @Format { @CurveBox @Body } { Section @NumberOf cross }" You can also give the formatting you want directly, since the object to the right of @Code "@CrossLink" can be an arbitrary Lout object: @ID @Code "cross @CrossLink @CurveBox { Section @NumberOf cross }" However, in this form the @Code "@CrossLinkFormat" setup file option is still applied. @PP External links are obtained in much the same way as internal ones, except that the symbol to use is @Code "@ExternalLink" and instead of supplying a tag, you need to supply a URL: @ID @Code { "\"http://snark.ptc.spbu.ru/~uwe/lout/lout.html\" @ExternalLink { Lout Home Page }" } Once again the result is the object to the right, modified by any @Code "@Format" option; and there is an {@Code "@ExternalLinkFormat"} setup file option that works in the same way as {@Code "@CrossLinkFormat"}. This time, though, the effect is to jump right out of your document to the given place on the World Wide Web, assuming that the software you are using to display your document is capable of such a thing. @PP At present, the @Code "@CrossLink" and @Code "@ExternalLink" symbols behave as though a @Code "@OneCol" symbol encloses the object to their right. This means that that object is kept together on one line of any enclosing paragraph, and inter-word spaces within it are not adjusted along with the inter-word spaces of any enclosing paragraph. This deficiency might be corrected in the future, but meanwhile it means that it is best to keep your objects on the right short. @End @Section