@Section @Title { Displays } @Tag { displays } @Begin @PP The @Code "@Display" symbol displays the following object in the centre displays. @Index displays display. @Index @Code "@Display" of the page or column: @ID @Code "@Display @I { Invitation to Afternoon Tea }" has result @Display @I { Invitation to Afternoon Tea } Space is inserted automatically above and below the display; no paragraph symbols are needed. @PP To display at the left margin instead of centred, use leftdisplay. @Index @Code "@LeftDisplay" {@Code "@LeftDisplay"} instead of {@Code "@Display"}. To indent the display, use {@Code "@IndentedDisplay"} or {@Code "@QuotedDisplay"}; indenteddisplay. @Index @Code "@IndentedDisplay" quoteddisplay. @Index @Code "@QuotedDisplay" the latter indents at the right margin as well as at the left. There are also @Code "@CentredDisplay" and @Code "@CenteredDisplay" symbols which centreddisplay. @Index @Code "@CentredDisplay" centereddisplay. @Index @Code "@CenteredDisplay" centre the display (like {@Code "@Display"}), and rightdisplay. @Index @Code "@RightDisplay" @Code "@RightDisplay" which right-justifies the display. @PP If you use displays frequently you might prefer abbreviated forms of their names. These are made from @Code "@" and the capital letters of d. @Index @Code "@D" ld. @Index @Code "@LD" id. @Index @Code "@ID" qd. @Index @Code "@QD" cd. @Index @Code "@CD" the full name: {@Code "@D"}, {@Code "@LD"}, {@Code "@ID"}, {@Code "@QD"}, and {@Code "@CD"}. Owing to a clash with the name of another symbol, {@Code "@RightDisplay"} has no abbreviation. @PP Displays often need to be set using a different font, paragraph breaking style, and so on to the surrounding text. It's best to set out such displays like this: @ID @OneRow @Code { "@CentredDisplay @I clines @Break {" "Invitation to Afternoon Tea" "with" "Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Newington-Smith" "}" } You can have as many of these symbols as you like, including specialized ones like {@Code "@CurveBox"} and {@Code "@Tbl"}. The only rule is that the display symbol must come first: @Code "@I @Display ..." is wrong. @PP It's not a good idea to have one display immediately followed by another one, because there will be too much vertical space between them. Use a list instead (Section {@NumberOf lists}). Displays at the ends of paragraphs look awkward and are best avoided. @PP A display may come out partly on one page or column and partly on the next, if it has places where it obviously can be broken in two. For example, a display which is an ordinary paragraph of text might be broken in two between any two lines. To force a display to keep together on one page or column, use the @Code "@OneRow" symbol like this: @Code "@Display @OneRow { ... }". @PP Other display symbols produce aligned and numbered displays, and raw displays (i.e. without vertical space). Although these can display any object as usual, in practice they are used for mathematics, so they are described in Section {@NumberOf mathdisplays}. @PP Three setup file options control the appearance of displays. (For a general introduction to setup files and their options, consult Section {@NumberOf setup}.) Here they are with their default values: @ID @OneRow @Code { "@DisplayGap { 1.00v }" "@DefaultIndent { 0.5rt }" "@DisplayIndent { 2.00f }" } @Code "@DisplayGap" is the amount of vertical space inserted before and display.gap. @Index @Code "@DisplayGap" after displays, and may be any length (Section {@NumberOf objects}). The default value, @Code {"1.00v"}, is equal to the current inter-line spacing. @PP @Code "@DefaultIndent" is the indent produced by default.indent @Index @Code "@DefaultIndent" {@Code "@Display"}; {@Code "0.5rt"} produces centring, although why it does so is beyond our scope @Cite { $kingston1995lout.expert }. @Code "@DisplayIndent" is the display.indent. @Index @Code "@DisplayIndent" indent for {@Code "@IndentedDisplay"}, and (at both margins) for {@Code "@QuotedDisplay"}. Its default value, {@Code "2.00f"}, is twice the current font size. @End @Section