On 1/14/2018 1:56 AM, Henri wrote:
Dear list,
For TeX/LaTeX users there is the neat command line tool `texdef` with
which you can show the definition of a macro. Here an example:
$ texdef -t latex section
\section:
\long macro:->\@startsection {section}{1}{\z@ }{-3.5ex \@plus -1ex
\@minus
Dear list,
For TeX/LaTeX users there is the neat command line tool `texdef` with
which you can show the definition of a macro. Here an example:
$ texdef -t latex section
\section:
\long macro:->\@startsection {section}{1}{\z@ }{-3.5ex \@plus -1ex
\@minus -.2ex}{2.3ex \@plus .2ex}{\normalfont
Dear list,
For TeX/LaTeX users there is the neat command line tool `texdef` with
which you can show the definition of a macro. Here an example:
$ texdef -t latex section
\section:
\long macro:->\@startsection {section}{1}{\z@ }{-3.5ex \@plus -1ex
\@minus -.2ex}{2.3ex \@plus .2ex}{\normalfont