Hi Lukáš,

I know these two ways:

\hyphenatedurl{d:/xx/~/yyy}
\type{d:/xx/~/yyy}

Cheers,

Tom


Wed, Jul 30, 2014 ve 02:09:43PM +0200 Procházka Lukáš Ing. - Pontex s. r. o. 
napsal(a):
# Hello,
# 
# which is the best way to typeset text (aka file names) containing tilde so 
that the tilde be visible?
# 
# I guess there is a something like (inline) "verbatim" mode which makes ~ (and 
maybe % $ etc.) visible...
# 
# I need to typeset e.g.
# 
# d:/Lukas/~/abc.def
# 
# and I'd like avoid "translating" ~ into e.g. \textasciitilde.
# 
# Best regards,
# 
# Lukas
# 
# 
# -- 
# Ing. Lukáš Procházka [mailto:l...@pontex.cz]
# Pontex s. r. o.      [mailto:pon...@pontex.cz] [http://www.pontex.cz]
# Bezová 1658
# 147 14 Praha 4
# 
# Tel: +420 241 096 751
# Fax: +420 244 461 038
# 
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