Lines Matching refs:Character
103 % If this character appears in an error message or help string, it
500 % Make each space character in the input produce a normal interword
1343 % Latin 2 (0xea) gets translated to a | character. Info from
2373 % character) is such as not to need one.
2800 % an actual _ character, as in @math{@var{some_variable} + 1}. So make
2872 % delimiter character idea from \verb, but it seems like overkill.
3007 % \tt widths. Each \tt character is 1en, so two makes it 1em.
4360 % For the aux and toc files, @ is the escape character. So we want to
4361 % redefine everything using @ as the escape character (instead of
4578 % starting with |, since that ASCII character is between ASCII { and }.
4865 % character. It would be better to use @, but that's too big a change
6199 % One exception: @ is still an escape character, so that @end tex works.
6200 % But \@ or @@ will get a plain @ character.
6565 % active too. Otherwise, they get lost as the first character on a
7695 % \braceorline decides whether the next nonwhitespace character is a
7952 % _ (for example) has to be the character _ for the purposes of the
8147 % character, we would end up writing a line like this: 'xrdef {'hat
8176 % character. What I don't understand is why it works in the *value*
8192 % @ is our escape character in .aux files, and we need braces.
8573 % is turned into a normal character, we have to scan it back, so
8710 \let_=\normalunderscore % normal _ character for filenames
8833 % A message to be logged when using a character that isn't available
8836 \def\missingcharmsg#1{\message{Character missing in OT1 encoding: #1.}}
8843 % macros containing the character definitions.
8846 % Latin1 (ISO-8859-1) character definitions.
8953 % Latin9 (ISO-8859-15) encoding character definitions.
8968 % Latin2 (ISO-8859-2) character definitions.
9073 % UTF-8 character definitions.
9588 % US-ASCII character definitions.
9821 % DEL is a comment character, in case @c does not suffice.
9835 % This macro is used to make a character print one way in \tt
9900 % \backslashcurfont outputs one backslash character in current font,
9905 % \realbackslash is an actual character `\' with catcode other, and
9909 % In texinfo, backslash is an active character; it prints the backslash
9927 % \otherbackslash defines an active \ to be a literal `\' character with
9933 % the literal character `\'.