@Section @Title { Footnotes and endnotes } @Tag { footnotes } @Begin @PP A footnote is created by typing footnote. @Index @Code "@FootNote" @ID @Code "@FootNote { Like this. }" after the word that the footnote refers to. It will be numbered automatically and placed at the foot of the page or column; @FootNote { Like this. } or, if space there is insufficient, it may start on or run onto the following page or column. The footnote must be enclosed in braces. @PP The @Code "@FootNote" symbol has a @Code "@Location" option which determines where it goes: @ID @Code { "@FootNote" " @Location { ColFoot }" "{ ... }" } places the footnote at the bottom of the column, and @ID @Code { "@FootNote" " @Location { PageFoot }" "{ ... }" } places it at the bottom of the current page, occupying the full page width even in a multi-column document (this is occasionally useful for footnotes to headings). Of course, in a single-column document there is no difference anyway. The default value of the @Code "@Location" option is {@Code "ColFoot"}. @PP Endnotes work in exactly the same way as footnotes, except that the endnote. @Index @Code "@EndNote" symbol to use is @Code "@EndNote" and they appear either at the end of the document or at the end of some major part of it, depending on the type of document (Chapter {@NumberOf types}). Endnotes are always column width and so have no @Code "@Location" option. @PP Footnotes are usually labelled with consecutive Arabic numberals, but you can tell Lout to label a footnote (not an endnote) with something else, like this: @ID @OneRow @Code @Verbatim { @FootNote @Label { @Dagger } { This footnote will be labelled with a dagger, not a number. } } whose result should appear at the bottom of this page. @FootNote @Label { @Dagger } { This footnote will be labelled with a dagger, not a number. } Symbols commonly used for footnote labels include @Code "@Dagger" (@Dagger), @Code "@DaggerDbl" (@DaggerDbl), @Code "@Star" (@Star), @Code "@SectSym" (@SectSym), and @Code "@ParSym" (@ParSym), but you can use any object. If you want no label at all, use an empty object like this: @ID @OneRow @Code @Verbatim { @FootNote @Label {} } Footnotes with a @Code "@Label" option are excluded from the automatic numbering that applies to other footnotes. @PP The language of a footnote or endnote will be the language of the document as a whole. This is not necessarily the same as the current language at the point where the footnote or endnote occurs, or even the language of the enclosing large-scale structure symbol. It may be necessary to enclose the body of the footnote in a language symbol, like this: @ID @Code "@FootNote { French @Language { ... } }" Doing it the other way ({@Code "French @Language @FootNote ..."}) is not effective. @PP A footnote attached to the very last line of a chapter or appendix of a book occasionally runs onto the first page of the following chapter or appendix, and this looks very poor. If this happens, the solution is to place an @Code "@LP" after the last line (including the footnote). @PP In the rare case where more than one footnote is attached to one word, use @Code "@AnotherFootNote" for the second and subsequent footnotes: anotherfootnote. @Index @Code "@AnotherFootNote" @ID @Code { "something or other." "@FootNote { The first footnote. }" "@AnotherFootNote { The second footnote. }" } This ensures that the superscripts will be separated by commas, as convention demands. @PP The setup file contains a number of options for controlling the appearance of footnotes. (See Section @NumberOf setup for a general introduction to setup files and their options.) Here are all the options, with their default values: @ID @OneRow @Code { "@FootNoteThrough { No }" "@FootNoteLocation { ColFoot }" "@FootNoteNumbers { Arabic }" "@FootNoteFont { 0.80f }" "@FootNoteBreak { 1.20fx }" "@FootNoteFormat { { number &0.05f } @Insert body }" "@FootLen { 2.00c }" "@FootAboveGap { 1.00v }" "@FootGap { 0.20c }" } There are also setup file options for controlling endnotes. Since they are quite similar to the ones for footnotes, we won't say any more about them here. @PP @Code "@FootNoteThrough" may be @Code "Yes" or @Code { "No" }; footnotethrough. @Index @Code "@FootNoteThrough" @Code "Yes" means that the footnotes are numbered continuously through the document (or through each chapter in the case of books); @Code "No" means that the numbering begins afresh on each page. @Code "@FootNoteLocation" determines the default value of footnotelocatin. @Index @Code "@FootNoteLocation" the @Code "@Location" option mentioned above; it may be either @Code "ColFoot" or {@Code "PageFoot"}. @Code "@FootNoteNumbers" determines how the footnotes are numbered; footnotenumbers. @Index @Code "@FootNoteNumbers" it may be {@Code Arabic}, {@Code Roman}, {@Code UCRoman}, {@Code Alpha}, or {@Code UCAlpha}. @PP @Code "@FootNoteFont" and @Code "@FootNoteBreak" determine the footnotefont. @Index @Code "@FootNoteFont" footnotebreak. @Index @Code "@FootNoteBreak" font and paragraph breaking style of footnotes. The default value of @Code "@FootNoteFont" produces the same font family and face as the bulk of the document, but reduced to 0.8 times the original size. @PP @Code "@FootNoteFormat" determines the format of the footnote. The @Code number symbol within it must appear exactly once, and is replaced by the number of the footnote (if numbered). The @Code body symbol is replaced by the body (that is, the content) of the footnote. The default value shown uses symbols from raw Lout to add a small space at the right of the number, then insert it at the beginning of the first paragraph of the body. Another suitable value might be @ID @Code "@FootNoteFormat { number |1fx body }" which places the body in a separate column to the number, one font width to the right of the left edge of the number. @PP @Code "@FootLen" determines the length of the small horizontal line footlen. @Index @Code "@FootLen" drawn above the footnotes; @Code "@FootAboveGap" determines the minimum space to be left clear footabovegap. @Index @Code "@FootAboveGap" above this line; and @Code "@FootGap" determines the footgap. @Index @Code "@FootGap" vertical separation between footnotes. All three may be any length. @End @Section