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distrib > Mandriva > 2010.0 > i586 > media > contrib-release > by-pkgid > 555052f1c3c300546718d229f4b194e7 > files > 76

lout-doc-3.31-6mdv2010.0.i586.rpm

@Section
   @Title { "@BeginHeaderComponent", "@EndHeaderComponent",
"@SetHeaderComponent", and "@ClearHeaderComponent" }
   @Tag { header_comp }
@Begin
@PP
Informally, header components are running headers that appear at the
header.component @Index { Header component of galley }
top of the displayed segments of galleys.  They are used, for example,
by the @Code "@Tbl" table formatting package to place running headers
at the top of each page of a multi-page table, after the first page.
@PP
Formally, a header component of a galley is an ordinary component of
a galley (Section {@NumberOf targets}) together with an indication
that the component is a header component.  When printed, a header
component looks exactly like it would have done as an ordinary
component; the difference is in whether the component is printed at all,
and if so where.
@PP
Every non-header component of every galley has associated with it a
sequence of zero or more header components.  Whenever a galley attaches
to a target, and the target does not itself occupy an entire component
of the enclosing galley, copies of the header components associated with the
first ordinary component to be promoted into that target are
promoted into it first.
@PP
The condition `and the target does not itself occupy an entire component
of the enclosing galley' ensures that, for example, when part of a section
has header components, these are not printed where the section is
promoted into its chapter, but rather where the chapter is promoted
onto pages.  If the target occupies the whole component, then the
incoming galley will not split at all, so headers would be of no
interest there.
@PP
The one remaining question is `How is the sequence of header
components of each ordinary component determined?'  By default,
the header components of one component are the same as those
of the previous component.  We can show this graphically as
follows:
@ID @OneRow lines @Break @Eq {
C sub i : H sub 1 , H sub 2 ,..., H sub n
"/"
C sub i+1 : H sub 1 , H sub 2 ,..., H sub n
}
which may be read: `If ordinary component @E { C sub i } has
header component sequence @E { H sub 1 , H sub 2 ,..., H sub n },
then its successor component @E { C sub i+1 } has header component
sequence @E { H sub 1 , H sub 2 ,..., H sub n } also.'  Using this
notation, we may now define the four symbols that affect header
component sequences:
@ID @OneRow lines @Break @Eq {
C sub i : H sub 1 , H sub 2 ,..., H sub n
"/"
gap `` @@BeginHeaderComponent `` H sub n+1
"/"
C sub i+1 : H sub 1 , H sub 2 ,..., H sub n , H sub n+1
}
That is, @@BeginHeaderComponent occupying an entire
begin.header.component.sym @Index { @@BeginHeaderComponent symbol }
component appends a header component to the sequence of the
following ordinary components.  When printed, this header
component is separated by @E { gap } from the following component;
if @E { gap } is empty it denotes @Code { 0ie } as usual with
concatenation gaps.  The appearance of the header component will be
exactly as it would have been had it occurred alone at that point,
rather than after @@BeginHeaderComponent.
@PP
Next comes @@EndHeaderComponent:
@ID @OneRow lines @Break @Eq {
C sub i : H sub 1 , H sub 2 ,..., H sub n , H sub n+1
"/"
@@EndHeaderComponent
"/"
C sub i+1 : H sub 1 , H sub 2 ,..., H sub n
}
That is, @@EndHeaderComponent (which has no parameters) occupying an
end.header.component.sym @Index { @@EndHeaderComponent symbol }
entire component deletes the last header component.  If the sequence is
empty, a warning message is printed and it remains
empty.  @@BeginHeaderComponent and @@EndHeaderComponent are naturally
used in matching (possibly nested) pairs, to introduce and subsequently
retract a header component.
@PP
Next comes @@SetHeaderComponent:
@ID @OneRow lines @Break @Eq {
C sub i : H sub 1 , H sub 2 ,..., H sub n
"/"
gap `` @@SetHeaderComponent `` H sub n+1
"/"
C sub i+1 : H sub n+1
}
@@SetHeaderComponent clears any current header components
set.header.component.sym @Index { @@SetHeaderComponent symbol }
and replaces them by one of its own.  Finally we have
@@ClearHeaderComponent:
@ID @OneRow lines @Break @Eq {
C sub i : H sub 1 , H sub 2 ,..., H sub n
"/"
@@ClearHeaderComponent
"/"
C sub i+1 : 
}
This symbol clears any header components, leaving the sequence empty.  These
clear.header.component.sym @Index { @@ClearHeaderComponent symbol }
last two symbols combine less cleanly than the first two (either will
wreck any enclosing @@BeginHeaderComponent -- @@EndHeaderComponent pair),
but they are useful in situations where the range of one header is
terminated by the start of the range of the next.
@PP
All four symbols yield the value @@Null where they appear.  If they
do not occupy entire components of their galley, they are silently
ignored.
@PP
Owing to limitations in the way header components are implemented, the
following object types are not allowed inside them, and Basser Lout will
complain and quit if it finds any of them:  galleys, receptive or
recursive symbols, cross references, @@PageLabel, @@HExpand, @@VExpand,
@@HCover, @@VCover, and @@Scale when it has an empty left parameter.
In addition, if more than three copies of the same running header are
printed on the same page, their horizontal positions will become
confused, probably resulting in the apparent disappearance of all but the
last three copies.  (The magic number 3 can be increased by recompiling
the Lout source with the @F MAX_HCOPIES constant increased.)
@End @Section