% Appendix.tex copyright1992 Victor Eijkhout % \Chapter Example styles To show you the strength of \Lollipop, this chapter collects a few example style definitions. The first one is that of this manual. \Section The style definition for this book In case you were wondering how this book was typeset, here is the full style definition. By the standards of what Lollipop can do it is pretty pedestrian. One thing that may have provide intellectual titilation is the definition of \cs{Example} and \cs{OutExample}. It allowed me to keep the examples in sync with their output. Of course that doesn't really rely on \Lollipop. It does illustrate the fact that \Lollipop\ is interfaceable to arbitrary macros. (But don't try loading \Lollipop\ on top of \LaTeX! On second thought, do. It disables most of \LaTeX. Just kidding.) \begingroup \PointSize:8 \tt \verbatimfile{mandefs.tex}\endgroup \Section[sec:address] Address book The following macros generate an address book. Several noteworthy features: \Itemize\item Most titles are short, that is, delimited by the line end. \item Since a page will now have several dozens of headings, the number of marks placed will become a problem, therefore the option \opt{nomarks} is included everywhere. Without this you would easily have memory overflows. \item The \cs{At} heading writes its information to an external file. This is then parsed by the macro \cs{CompNam}. A~slight amount of knowledge of Lollipop internals is used here for parameter parsing, but not more than can be gleaned from simply looking at the external file.\par Then a token list is created for each company, and these lists are printed somewhere down the file. This is a bit of \TeX\ programming that is not quite elementary, but still \Lollipop saves you a lot of work. \> If you want to see the output, run \TeX\ with Lollipop twice on the \file{address.tex} file. \begingroup \PointSize:8 \tt \verbatimfile{address.tex}\endgroup \endinput