cortav  Diff

Differences From Artifact [54b40e50db]:

To Artifact [fb6019b4ad]:


   118    118   * [`$[$macro] [$arg1]|[$arg2]|[$argn]…] invokes a block-level macro with the supplied arguments, and can be followed by a property override definition list the same way embed and resource lines can. note that while both [`$[$id]] and [`&[$id]] can be used to instantiate resources of type [`text/x.cortav], there is a critical difference: [`$[$id]] renders out the sub-document separately each time it is named, allowing for parameter expansion and for context variables to be overridden for each invocation. by contrast, [`&[$id]] can only insert copies of the same render; no parameters can be passed and context variables will be expanded to their value at the time the resource was defined.
   119    119   ** [`$mymacro arg 1|arg 2|arg 3]
   120    120   * [*horizontal rule] ([`\---]): inserts a horizontal rule or other context break; does not end the section. must be followed by newline. underlines can also be used in place of dashes ([`___], [`-_-], [`__-__-__] etc), as can horizontal unicode box drawing characters ([`─ ━ ┈] etc).
   121    121   * [*page break] ([`\^^]): for formats that support pagination, like EPUB or HTML (when printed), indicates that the rest of the current page should be blank. for formats that do not, extra margins will be inserted. does not create a new section
   122    122   * [*page rule] ([`\^-^]): inserts a page break for formats that support them, and a horizontal rule for formats that do not. does not create a new section. comprised of any number of horizontal rule characters surrounded by a pair of carets (e.g. [`^-^] [`^_^] [`^----^] [`^__--^] [`^┈┈┈┈┈^])
   123    123   * [*table cells] ([`+ |]): see [>ex.tab table examples].
   124    124   * [*equations] ([`=]): block-level equations can be inserted with the [`=] sequence
   125         -* [*cross-references] ([`=>] [`⇒]): inserts a block-level link. uses the same syntax as span links ([`⇒[$ident] [$styled-text]]). can be followed by a caption to add a longer descriptive text. especially useful for gemtext output. ident can be omitted to cross-reference, for example, a physical book.
          125  +* [*cross-references] ([`=>] [`⇒]): inserts a block-level link. has two forms for the sake of gemtext compatibility. [$styled-text] is a descriptive text of the destination. especially useful for menus and gemtext output.
          126  +** the cortav syntax is [`=>[$ident] [$styled-text]], where [$ident] is an identifier; links to the same destination as [` \[>[$ident] [$styled-text]\]] would
          127  +** the compatibility syntax is [`=> [$uri] [$styled-text]] (note the space before [$uri]!). instead of taking an identifier for an object in the document, it directly accepts a URI. note that this is not formally equivalent to gemtext's link syntax, which also allows paths in place of URIs; [`cortav] does not. the gemtext line ["=> /somewhere] would need to be expressed as ["=> file:/somewhere], and ["=> /somewhere?key=val] as ["http:/somewhere?key=val] (or ["gemini:/somewhere?key=val], if the result is to be served over a gemini server).
   126    128   * [*empty lines] (that is, lines consisting of nothing but whitespace) constitute a [!break], which terminates multiline objects that do not have a dedicated termination sequence, for example lists and asides.
   127    129   
   128    130   ##onspans styled text
   129    131   most blocks contain a sequence of spans. these spans are produced by interpreting a stream of [*styled-text] following the control sequence. styled-text is a sequence of codepoints potentially interspersed with escapes. an escape is formed by an open square bracket [`\[] followed by a [*span control sequence], and arguments for that sequence like more styled-text. escapes can be nested.
   130    132   
   131    133   * strong {obj *|styled-text}: causes its text to stand out from the narrative, generally rendered as bold or a brighter color.
   132    134   * emphatic {obj !|styled-text}: indicates that its text should be spoken with emphasis, generally rendered as italics