On October 7th Damian Conway wrote:
Before Christmas, as promised!
[DRAFT] Synopsis 26 - Documentation
Thank you for that, Damian! Apologies for taking a while to respond,
but I wanted to leave reading the document until I had a sufficient
chunk of time to do it justice. And I was very
Trey Harris writes:
In a message dated Wed, 4 Oct 2006, Smylers writes:
Trey Harris writes: T
I remember not so many years ago when there were a lot of modules
floating around that required you to do no strict of various
flavors in order to use them.
Really? How?
I wrote
On Oct 16, 2006, at 2:51 PM, Smylers wrote:
...
Perl 6 makes considerable use of Elaquo and Eraquo.
I think the only standard XML entities are Clt;, Cgt;, and
Camp;. Particular XML languages can define further entities which
use that syntax, but they aren't included by default.
The
Author: larry
Date: Mon Oct 16 16:20:07 2006
New Revision: 13163
Modified:
doc/trunk/design/syn/S04.pod
Log:
bare prints spotted by bsb++.
Modified: doc/trunk/design/syn/S04.pod
==
--- doc/trunk/design/syn/S04.pod
Author: larry
Date: Mon Oct 16 17:23:16 2006
New Revision: 13164
Modified:
doc/trunk/design/syn/S01.pod
Log:
S01 was missing encoding directive.
Modified: doc/trunk/design/syn/S01.pod
==
---
Author: larry
Date: Mon Oct 16 17:40:41 2006
New Revision: 13165
Modified:
doc/trunk/design/syn/S03.pod
doc/trunk/design/syn/S06.pod
Log:
More undotty print/say from bsb++.
Modified: doc/trunk/design/syn/S03.pod
Smylers pointed out (and Danny Brian confirmed):
The default entities are Clt;, Cgt;, Camp;, Capos;, and
Cquot;.
I *knew* there was a good reason I shun XML! ;-)
Clearly five entities is Inot going to suffice. The synposis now reads:
To include named Unicode or XHTML entities, use the